System and method for providing testing for a communities framework

ABSTRACT

A community for maintaining user membership can be provided. Each major component of the communities framework can have multiple portals associated with its series of tests. Each of these portals can start out as a portal file. These portal files can be ran through the dissassembler in order to render the portals representing individual community instances. Once the community instance is created for the portal, various HTML unit tests can be written by the developer in order to access that portal as some user with given membership and functional capabilities. The test framework can automatically create users giving them membership in the community and mapping them to membership capabilities. The component code can subsequently be accessed in the context of a real user or member of the community. In this manner, a more realistic and efficient testing environment is achieved.

CLAIM OF PRIORITY

This application claims priority to the following U.S. ProvisionalPatent Applications which are hereby incorporated herein by reference:

U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/737,621, filed Nov. 17, 2005,entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR PROVIDING A COMMUNITY FRAMEWORK IN ACOLLABORATIVE COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT.”

U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/742,186, filed Dec. 2, 2005,entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR PROVIDING A COMMUNITY FRAMEWORK IN ACOLLABORATIVE COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT WITH SEARCH CONTROLS.”

CROSS-REFERENCED CASES

The following applications are cross-referenced and incorporated hereinby reference:

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING EXTENSIBLE CONTROLS IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by CindyMcMullen et al., filed Mar. 2, 2006.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING GENERIC CONTROLS IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Cindy McMullenet al., filed Mar. 3, 2006.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING SECURITY IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Cindy McMullen et al.,filed Feb. 28, 2006.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING UNIQUE KEY STORES IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Ray Polk etal., filed Mar. 3, 2006.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING ANALYTICS IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Cindy McMullen etal., filed ______.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING NOTIFICATIONS IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Christopher E.Bales et al., filed Mar. 6, 2006.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING TESTING FOR A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Cindy McMullen et al.,filed ______.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING ACTIVE MENUS IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Christopher E.Bales et al., filed ______.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING DYNAMIC CONTENT IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Christopher E.Bales et al., filed ______.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORDISPLAYING HTML CONTENT FROM A PORTLET AS A PAGE ELEMENT IN ACOMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Christopher E. Bales, filed

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING DRAG AND DROP FUNCTIONALITY IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” byChristopher E. Bales et al., filed ______.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FORPROVIDING SEARCH CONTROLS IN A COMMUNITIES FRAMEWORK” by Cindy McMullenet al., filed ______.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE

A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains materialwhich is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has noobjection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent documentor the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and TrademarkOffice patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyrightrights whatsoever.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates generally to collaborative computing environmentsand in particular to providing relationships between resources in acommunities framework.

BACKGROUND

The popularity and demand for collaborative and distributed computingenvironments has increased in the recent years due to the popularity ofthe internet, networks and portal frameworks. A wide variety ofenterprises, ranging from large corporations to small developmentprojects, often have use for such software. For example, employees,developers and other users within an enterprise often work on projectsin groups, collaborating with one another as the project progresses.Such groups of users frequently need access to the same resources,materials and information on certain topics. Thus, software designed toallow a group of users on a network to work simultaneously on a projectis desirable. Present day solutions typically provide services forcommunicating (such as email), group document development, scheduling,and tracking. For example, groupware is a form of application softwarethat integrates work on a single project by several concurrent users onseparate workstations on a computer network.

One area where these trends have been implemented has been in thecontext of content frameworks referred to as portals. A portal can bethought of as a gateway or an access point for users to various types ofcontent and other collections of information. One example of a portalserver is the WebLogic® Portal product available from BEA Systems Inc.Portals are typically visually represented and often have a portal pagefor allowing users to navigate the data provided therein. Portals areideal for implementations of groupware programs since multiple users canbe provided a single point of access to a wide variety of information.

There are several available groupware products deployed on portalframeworks and available on the market today. Most of them allow someform of user collaboration in an effort to increase productivity.However, these solutions are often very rigid in their requirements forthe data and services they provide. For example, most of such softwareis geared toward specific enterprises, groups or projects and allowlittle in terms of customization. What is needed is a more abstract,dynamic and user-friendly approach, one that would provide a more fluidand adaptable system of collaboration between users over a distributedcomputing environment.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 is an illustration of an overall communities framework, inaccordance with certain embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 2 is an illustration of a collaboration repository and datacontained therein, in accordance with certain embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 3 is an illustration of security implementation in the communitiesframework, in accordance with certain embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 4 is an illustration of the user interface of the security levelone feature, in accordance with certain embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 5 is an illustration of the hierarchy of various functionalcapabilities of the communities framework, in accordance with certainembodiments of the invention.

FIG. 6 is an illustration of security level two feature of thecommunities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustration of the functionality of thecombined levels of security for the communities framework in accordancewith various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 8A is an exemplary illustration of the extensible and genericcontrols features of the communities framework, in accordance withvarious embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 8B is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe extensible controls feature of the communities framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 9 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe extensible controls feature of the communities framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 10 is a flow diagram illustration of the functionality of theanalytics feature in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 11 is an exemplary illustration of the unique key stores feature ofthe communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 12A is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe dynamic content tags feature of the communities framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 12B is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe dynamic content tags feature of the communities framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 12C is a flow diagram illustration of the dynamic content feature,in accordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 13A is a flow diagram illustration of the functionality of thenotification manager in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 13B is an exemplary illustration of the notification system classdiagram in the communities framework, in accordance with variousembodiments of the invention.

FIG. 14 is a flow diagram illustration of the functionality of thepinging for notifications feature in accordance with various embodimentsof the invention.

FIG. 15 is an exemplary illustration of the resource interlinkingfeature of the communities framework, in accordance with variousembodiments of the invention.

FIG. 16 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe drag and drop and resource interlinking features of the communitiesframework, in accordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 17 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe drag and drop and resource interlinking features of the communitiesframework, in accordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 17B is an exemplary illustration of drag and drop tag feature ofthe communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 18 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe active menus feature of the communities framework, in accordancewith various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 19 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface implementingthe active menus feature of the communities framework, in accordancewith various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 20 is an exemplary illustration of the active menus framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 21 is an exemplary illustration of displaying HTML content from aportlet as a page element, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

FIG. 22 is an exemplary illustration of the test framework feature, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 23 is a flow diagram illustration of the search controls featurefor the communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments ofthe invention.

FIG. 24 is an exemplary illustration of the search controls feature forthe communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Aspects of the invention are illustrated by way of example and not byway of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings in whichlike references indicate similar elements. It should be noted thatreferences to “an,” “one,” “various” and “further” embodiments in thisdisclosure is not necessarily to the same embodiment, and suchreferences mean at least one. In the following description, numerousspecific details are set forth to provide a thorough description of theinvention. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art thatthe invention may be practiced without these specific details. In otherinstances, those features which are well-known in the art have not beendescribed in detail so as not to obscure the invention.

In various embodiments, systems and methods for providing collaborationamong users in the context of a distributed computing environment areprovided. A community framework is presented for introducing a sense ofmemberships and communities to a portal desktop. In one embodiment, thecommunities framework can be implemented on a portal application serversuch as the WebLogic® Portal product available from BEA Systems Inc.Java® Development Kit (JDK) version 1.5 can be implemented to make useof Generics and Annotations provided therewith. A community can beprovided for maintaining user membership during a collaboration projectin a computing environment. A community can be thought of as amembership based desktop within a portal used to deliver user-tailoredapplications and workspaces. Thus, users who are members of thecommunity, may share resources, such as documents, view resources,design and assign task lists, maintain a list of internet links, etc.

Communities can be the base level for collaboration in a portal. Acommunity provides a sub-container within a portal to provide access toapplications and content to specific groups of people, i.e. its members.In various embodiments, a community can provide a way to define accessto areas of a portal. End users, developers as well as non-technicalbusiness users are provided the ability to quickly and easily define anarea where they can choose the applications and content to be madeavailable and the people who can participate—without requiring expertsand technical knowledge of IT. In one embodiment, the communityframework is essentially a desktop with additional features to supportportal resource grouping and management by end users.

FIG. 1 is an exemplary illustration of the communities framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention. Although thisdiagram depicts components as logically separate, such depiction ismerely for illustrative purposes. It will be apparent to those skilledin the art that the components portrayed in this figure can be combinedor divided into separate software, firmware and/or hardware components.Furthermore, it will also be apparent to those skilled in the art thatsuch components, regardless of how they are combined or divided, canexecute on the same computing device or can be distributed amongdifferent computing devices connected by one or more networks or othersuitable communication means.

For example, a community (140) may be composed of various collaborationresources (104) and community services (100) as well as users (118, 120,122, 124, 126) who are members of the community and who have access tothe resources and services. A community can also have its own communityproperties (108) which can allow for its customization. Communityproperties can be any key value pairs that are associated with aparticular community. For example, a community property (108) mayspecify the type of the community it is, the project that the communityis intended for, the period of time that the community is meant toexist, or whether a community is public. Similarly, a mapping of varioussecurity roles to functional capabilities (as discussed in furtherdetail below) can be stored as a community property. The communityproperties can be contained within a separate community frameworkdatabase of the community framework.

Various users (118, 120, 122, 124, 126) may be accessing and making useof the community (140) through an interface (114). The interface can bea graphical user interface (GUI) rendered on a display device, forexample. Security access can be provided (as described in further detailbelow) by membership and functional capabilities (112) in thecommunities framework. Through such security control, users can obtainaccess to various community services (100), collaboration resources(104) and community properties (108) and make use of these featuresduring their collaboration over a distributed computing environment.

Collaboration resources (104) are various content data types that mayprovide assistance to the members of the community during theircollaboration on some project. Typically, a collaboration resource isstored in a repository and contains some type of information about acollaboration project that members of the community are working on. Someexamples of collaboration resources include documents, issues,discussions, links, events, announcements, as well as other types offiles, data and services. As an illustration, developers may maintain alist of open issues that are migrated to closed issues as they areresolved. Announcement resource, on the other hand, may be displayedinitially in a special section of the community header, and can bescoped to either the entire community or a list of recipients. In oneembodiment, announcements can be either “acknowledged” (marked as havingbeen already read) or deleted which would remove them from the header.As another illustration, the links portlet may contain a list of linksto documents, portal resources and remote sites that are of interest toa user of a desktop or member of a community. The link data can bestored in the content management system and CRUD (create, retrieve,update, delete) operations on that data can be supported according touser capability. Links may be organized in groups such as “News” or“Sports” and a hierarchical relationship among the various links can beimplemented. Links can subsequently be displayed in a list that supportsordering and filtering. For example, a sort by creation date, name,description, type, visibility would sort the links accordingly anddisplay the sorted list to the user.

A community can also have multiple users (118, 120, 122, 124, 126) whichare members of that community. These members should be able to share thecollaboration resources in the community. Sharing a resource can beaccomplished by creating a link to the resource to be shared, by copyingthe entire resource, or by some other means available in the art. Thedecision of which method is to be employed may be left up to the systemadministrator of an enterprise.

A community member can be defined to represent the external unified viewof the user of the community. In other words, it may be a singlerepresentation of the user, one that all community services can use. Forexample, the community services may need to integrate with separate anddistinct concepts of the user such as the portal UUP (unified userprofile) and the community framework concept of the user. The notion ofthe community member allows all community services to integrate withvarious separate concepts of users. A member can also be a unified ideaof a group of users. Various data can be associated with a member, suchas first_name, last_name, user_name, membership (of various groups),roles (what the member can do), email address, presence (online,offline), etc.

In one embodiment, community services (100) are individual portlets thatprovide various services and functionality to the community. They may beused individually or aggregated to form a new community application. Forexample, a content directory service can be a portlet that provides endusers with the ability to browse the content directory where they haveaccess privileges and create and manage content items as they haveprivileges. An issues service can be a portlet that allows users tocreate lists of issues related to the project that may need to beaddressed. The community search service can be implemented, allowingadvanced search options for searching the community's resources such asissues, announcements, documents in the document library and so on. Thisservice can be scoped to the search in the member's local content oracross an entire enterprise repository. A rich site summary (RSS)service can be a portlet that connects to external sites that provideRSS information, retrieves news topics based on visitor preference, anddisplays them as clickable links. Various other services can also beimplemented.

Templates may be provided for the communities framework. A communitytemplate is the pre-packaged set of collaboration resources from which acommunity can be built. The template provides users with the ability tocreate applications without the need for any coding. Thus, by employingtemplates, a user can readily construct a community with specificcollaboration resources and add members to that community without anydetailed knowledge of the programming languages involved.

In various embodiments, multiple communities can be structuredhierarchically such that each community may have multiple children butonly one parent. Community members may create a new community from theparent community. Such a hierarchical relationship may be useful toscope data and to organize communities. For example data may be scopedto an individual user or to the community to which the user belongs,i.e. is a member of. The definition of what a hierarchy among severalcommunities means can be made to be configurable by a user or systemadministrator. For example, some projects may require that the same databe made available to members of a child community as to members of theparent community. Other projects may need to make the members of theparent community also members of the child or vice versa. The particularimplementation will vary with the particular type of project orenterprise choosing to implement this feature and consequently the aboveexamples are not intended to exhaust all of the various possibilities.

Various data in the communities framework, such as the collaborationresources (104) can be stored in a separate instance of a repository foreach community. Alternatively, each community may get a top level nodewithin the repository. The choice of implementation may be madeconfigurable by a system administrator.

FIG. 2 is an exemplary illustration of data layout within a repositoryof an enterprise, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention. A repository (200) can be a database, file system or someother form of a persistent storage. In one embodiment, data ishierarchically laid out according to the community's universal resourceidentifier (URI). The collaboration repository (200) contains a toplevel folder named Communities (202). Beneath the main Communitiesfolder, data is further split into various nodes such as the Application(206) node, the Portal (208) node and the community_A (210) node. Thecommunity_A node may contain all of the collaboration resources such asall the issues (212), links (220) and events (228) for the particularcommunity named community_A. Other communities, such as community_B (notshown) for example, may have their own folders somewhere beneath thegeneral Communities folder (202). Furthermore, each specific resourcesuch as issue_A (214), issue_B (216) and issue_N (218) can be furtherlocated beneath the general issues (212) node. Similarly, each specificlink such as link_A (222), link_B (224), link_N (228) and each specificevent such as event_A (230), event_B (232) and event_N (234) can belocated beneath their appropriate links (220) and events (228) folders.

In one embodiment, a Users (204) folder can be placed beneath thegeneral Communities folder (202) and can contain all the data for eachspecific user, no matter which communities that user belongs to. Thus,user_A (236) may be the owner of link_A (242), issue_B (244) andresource N (246) and as such, these resources would be located beneaththe user_A folder in the content hierarchy. Similarly, user_B (238) mayhave access to link_C (248), event_C (250) and resource_X (252) whileuser_C may have access to issue_C (254), link_B (256) and resource_Y(258), all located beneath their own appropriate nodes.

Data within the content management system can be stored in folders andnodes as previously described. Each data type, such as the collaborationresource “link” for example, can be merely an object wrapper for theactual node in the content management system. Thus, during initialresource creation, a new node may be created and that new node would getassigned to the particular wrapper. For example, if a developer wants tocreate a new issue, a new node within the repository is created. Thenthat new node gets assigned to the issue wrapper. During objectretrieval, such as during a method call get_all_issues( ), all nodeswould be found that satisfy a certain condition, and then new issueswould be instantiated dynamically, directly from those nodes that arereturned. This type of system provides the ability to perform verystrong typing within the content management repository. Thus, forexample, a developer need not request for a specific data type, insteadhe or she can merely request for all data types that match a certaincriteria.

The top level folders for each community can be cached so as to increaseperformance of the access to the data. Content uniqueness can beguaranteed by the specification of primary keys (described in detailunder “Unique Key Stores” heading below) for each data type. Data may bescoped to either the individual user or to the entire community. Forexample, a user may wish to have his/her own set of task items, but alsowish to display the tasks that belong to the community.

Data such as the various collaboration resources can be marked with avisibility and ownership fields for the purposes of distinguishing it aswell as for security purposes. As a non-limiting example, the“community” and “private” data could be placed in the data hierarchydirectly beneath the specific community folder. The “personal”visibility data, on the other hand, could be placed in a top-level usersfolder. Then the “personal” data could be made available to a user inany community. In one embodiment, data can be created with “community”visibility by default. However, ability to override that default canalso be provided, such as by a control constructor:

Link privateLink=linksControl.create( . . . , Visibility.PRIVATE);

In one embodiment, once content is deemed “personal,” it will remain so.“Private” data may be promoted to “community” data and “community” datawill remain “community” data. However, other implementations arepossible and are well within the scope of the present invention.

Removal of community data may take place automatically when thecorresponding community is removed. Alternatively, the removal could beperformed manually by the manager, owner or some other member of thecommunity. The selection of the two implementations could be made to beconfigurable by a system administrator.

All community data can be made to derive from a base class (e.g.CM_Content) and the User Interface facing controls can use strong typingvia Java® generics and inheritance.

Level 1 Security

Security access to the collaboration resources can be restricted basedon community membership capabilities or roles. These membershipcapabilities can determine certain privileges that a particular memberis allowed in the community. In one embodiment, the communitiesframework membership capabilities are mapped one-to-one to specificWebLogic® Server roles. For example, five basic memberships included ina template can be Owner, Creator, Leader, Contributor, Member. Thecapability of Member can be implemented to be the absence of any othercapability. The definition of these membership capabilities can bechanged and scoped per application or per community. These membershipcapabilities can be declared in a community config.xml file and cansubsequently be edited by the user or system administrator of thecommunities framework. Customers can also create an infinite number ofnew community roles or membership capabilities by editing this file.Alternatively such declarations can be stored in some other manner, suchas in order to protect role definitions.

The membership capabilities or roles can be mapped to a set offunctional capabilities which define what a member is or is not allowedto do. These mappings can be persisted by the membership securitymanager service and can be customizable to each specific community. Asecurity control can supply default mappings and it can also permitcommunity administrators to override those mappings and/or to define andmap additional membership capability/functional capability pairs for thecommunity. This security control can be implemented to initialize thesecurity for the entire community and should preferably be called from apage flow by the community administrator prior to any content access.

Examples of functional capabilities can include browse, update, view,create, delete as well as other data and resource editing abilities.Thus, every role defined in an editable file has a set of functionalcapabilities associated with it, which specify what a member in thatrole is allowed to do. For example, a role of community Creator can beallowed to create a new community, add a manager to the community,remove a manager, add a user or edit content. On the other hand, acommunity Manager role may be allowed to add or remove users from thecommunity, enable or disable self-registration for a community and editcertain types of content within the community. It should be noted thatthese are mere examples of some definitions, many otherenterprise-specific implementations are possible. A user interface canbe provided in order to make it easier for developers to define what aparticular membership capability is allowed to do or, in other words,what functional capabilities that role is assigned to.

FIG. 3 is an exemplary illustration of the security features provided inthe communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention. Various members (302, 304, 306, 308, 310) of the communityare each assigned to a specific membership capability or role (312, 314,316, 318). For example, member A (302) is assigned to the membershipcapability of Owner (312) while member B (304) can be assigned to therole Creator (314). Similarly, member C (306) is assigned to the Visitor(316) membership capability and members D (308) and E (310) are assignedto the role of Contributor (318). This set of membership capabilities(320) is further mapped to a set of functional capabilities (322) suchas can_create( ), can_delete( ), can_browse( ), can_view( ), can_update() and so on. As such, the role of Owner (312) has some definedfunctional capabilities that it is allowed to perform, while the role ofVisitor (316) has some other functional capabilities associated with it.Thus, all the members that are assigned to a specific role are allowedto perform its appropriate functions. The various membershipcapabilities (320) and the functional capabilities (322) can be created,modified and removed by the system administrator, user or developerwithin an enterprise. Other community-specific implementations are alsopossible. For example, one community may wish to define a role ofVisitor, while another community may not wish to allow this particularrole definition. Such community-specific definitions and mappings can bestored as community properties and allow for further customization ofeach community.

The security access control described above constitutes the securitylevel one feature of the communities framework. Thus, if a given memberis not allowed to perform a certain task by the membership capabilityand functional capability definitions, he or she will not even beallowed access to the repository (328). If, however, the user's chosentask is allowed by the capabilities definitions, then the user willenter level two security, wherein access to the resources (326) in therepository (328) is controlled by entitlements (324). This will bedescribed in further detail below, under the heading “Level 2 Security.”

FIG. 4 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface for theadministration of the level 1 security feature, in accordance withvarious embodiments of the invention. The role (i.e. membershipcapability) names are listed in the role name column (400) and includesuch definitions as Owner (402), Contributor (404), Visitor (406),Member (408), Uber (410), and Creator (412). The functional capabilitiesare listed in separate columns to the left of the role name column (400)and include Browse (414), View (416), Update (418), Create (420) andDelete (422) columns. Below each functional capability is a checkbox forthe appropriate role definition. A system administrator or a particularmember of a community can be allowed to define the appropriatefunctional capabilities for each membership capability, therebycontrolling security access of various members assigned to themembership capabilities. A checked box indicates that the appropriaterole is allowed to perform the specified function by the functionalcapability. Thus, for example, the role of Owner (400) is allowed toperform each of Browse (414), View (416), Update (418), Create (420) andDelete (422) functional capabilities. On the other hand, the role ofVisitor is only allowed to perform the Browse (414) action for theresources within the repository. Of course, other enterprise-specificand community-specific implementations are possible and fall within thescope of the present invention.

FIG. 5 is an exemplary illustration of a possible hierarchy for thevarious functional capabilities of the communities framework, inaccordance with certain embodiments of the invention. Such ahierarchical relationship can be used to enable delegation andinheritance for the functional capabilities. For example, the functionalcapability of create_community (506) can be the top node in thehierarchical tree and it may have several children such as add_manager(510), manage (508) and remove_manager (512). The manage node (508) inturn can have its own children nodes such as add_user (514), edit (516),remove_user (518) activate (520) and deactivate (522). A parent-childrelationship can provide for inheritance of all children nodesfunctional capabilities to the parent. Thus, for example, the role ofCommunity Creator (500) can be mapped to the functional capabilitycreate_community (506) and thereby inherit all the capabilities beneathit, such as manage (508), edit (516) or edit_content (528) as well asothers. Similarly, a role of Community Manager (502) can be mapped tothe manage functional capability (508). Through it, the CommunityManager role can inherit the functional capabilities of add_user (514),edit (516), remove_user (518), activate (520), deactivate (522) as wellas add_property (524), edit_property (526) edit_content (528),remove_property (530) and edit_layout (532). Thus, any member assignedto the Community Manager role would be allowed to perform all of theaforementioned tasks.

Level 2 Security

Access to the resources and data within the repository can be furtherrestricted by entitlements and visibility. Thus, a double-layer securitycan be implemented for the collaboration environment-one layer at thecommunity level and another one at the repository level. At thecommunity level, authorization and authentication can be provided by theuse of roles and functional capabilities as described above under theheading “Level 1 Security.” At the repository level, on the other hand,access to data can be restricted by entitling each collaborationresource. Entitlements can have a single role calledCommunityContentRole, not to be confused with the roles (membershipcapabilities) declared in the communities-config.xml file andimplemented by level 1 security feature. Those roles preferably do notapply at security level 2.

For example, the collaboration resources in the repository can each beentitled according to the community restrictions and content visibility.An entitlement can be a combination of a resource (e.g. a node withinthe repository) and a security policy that is associated with that node.In other words, an entitlement can be implemented as a rule that grantsor denies access to a collaboration resource.

FIG. 6 is an exemplary illustration of security level two feature of thecommunities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention. Various entitlements (612) can restrict access to the data(614) within the repository (600) regardless of whether the repositoryis accessed from a community or from some kind of content managementrepository browser. The data includes various collaboration resourcessuch as issue_A (616), issue_B (618), link_A (620) and announcement_A(622). The entitlements (612) can have a single role such as theCommunityContent Role (610). Thus, every member of the community such asmember_A (602), member_B (604), member_C (606) and member_D (608) cansatisfy the requirements of the CommunityContentRole provided that theyare in the right community at the right time, and otherwise fulfillvarious other requirements. This CommunityContentRole can be implementedas a properties file and is basically a set of rules that can be appliedto different nodes within the content repository. Thus, if a user meetscertain criteria (e.g. they are in Community A viewing data withCommunity visibility), then they are considered within theCommunityContentRole and access to the particular resource can then beallowed. Such access to each node within the repository can be evaluatedwhenever CRUD (create, read, update and delete) operations are requestedfor it. In this manner, the entitlements control access to thecollaboration resources at their individual node level.

When the community instance is first created, the hierarchy of the nodescan be laid out within the content repository. Then each node isentitled according to the community to which it belongs and according tothe rules contained in the CommunityContentRole.properties file. Oneentitlement given to a node within the repository, can also be appliedto all other nodes within the hierarchy unless overridden with anotherentitlement.

Subsequently at runtime, when a member is requesting to perform anaction on some node of a particular community, that member must firstprove himself to be in the CommunityContentRole. In order to determinewhether the member is in the CommunityContentRole, the system can gothrough the rules in the CommunityContentRole.properties, checkingwhether this particular member satisfies them. Thus if member_Asatisfies the rules, he is considered to be within theCommunityContentRole and access can be granted to member_A. In thismanner, instead of having to assign every user to a particular roleright at the beginning, the communities framework need not finallydetermine security until that user gets ready to perform some specificaction on the data within the content management repository. Thisprovides for a more flexible, dynamic and secure approach for accessingvarious resources within the repository.

In one embodiment, resources (616, 618, 620, 622) may each have avisibility of “private,” “personal,” or “community.” Thus, if thecollaboration resource has the visibility of “private,” only the memberof the community who is the owner of the data can have access to it. Onthe other hand, if the data has “community” visibility, then all membersof that community can be allowed to access it. Yet a third possibilityis “personal” visibility which would allow the user access to data inall communities that the user is a member of, as well as any other datathat the user is an owner of.

FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustration of the functionality of thecombined levels of security for the communities framework in accordancewith various embodiments of the invention. Although this figure depictsfunctional steps in a particular order for purposes of illustration, theprocess is not necessarily limited to this particular order or steps.One skilled in the art will appreciate that the various steps portrayedin this figure can be omitted, rearranged, performed in parallel oradapted in various ways.

In step 700, a member such as member_A requests to perform a specifictask on some resource. For example, member_A may wish to update issue_Aby requesting to resolve it and move it to the list of closed Issues.

In step 702, the system can then determine what membership capability(role) member_A has been assigned to. For example, member_A may havebeen assigned to the role of Contributor.

In step 704, the system can check which functional capabilitiesmember_A's role is mapped to. For example, the role of Contributor maybe mapped to a set of functional capabilities including browse( ), view(), update( ), and create( ).

In step 706, the system can use the information obtained in steps 702and 704 to determine whether security level one allows member_A accessto the repository. Following the above example, since member_A has beenassigned to Contributor role and since the Contributor role is allowedto update resources in the repository, the system can allow member_Asecurity access to the repository and proceed to step 710. If theContributor role were not mapped to the update( ) functional capability,then access would be denied to member_A at level one, thereby precludinghim from getting to the repository level, as illustrated in step 708.

In step 710, security level two is entered. The system proceeds to therepository level and obtains the entitlements and visibility informationfor the requested resource. Following the example above, the systemwould obtain the visibility for issue_A and determine if member_A canhave access to it based on that visibility. Similarly, it would checkthe entitlement for issue_A and determine if member_A fits in thecommunity content role, i.e. can properly update issue_A based on thatentitlement, as illustrated in step 712. If the entitlement andvisibility information also allow access, then member_A would be allowedto update the resource issue_A, as illustrated in step 716. On the otherhand, if entitlements or the visibility of issue_A preclude member_Afrom updating it, access would be denied as illustrated in step 714.

It is worth noting that member_A could be denied access at two differentlevels; once at security level one and once at security level two (therepository level). This is done for reasons of efficiency, simplicityand performance. For example, entitlement evaluation may not be veryefficient. Furthermore, complex rules in addition to the restriction ofwhich membership capability a user is in are not required. If a userdoes not pass level 1, there is no need to go on to level 2. Rather,access can be denied then and there. Once in level 2, the user isgranted all CRUD operations by virtue of the role policies; level 1filters out those requirements. Level 1 security permits the flexibilityof having arbitrary sets of CRUD rights granted to any membershipcapability.

One advantage of such a security system is that it can reduce the numberof connections to the repository, thereby improving speed andperformance of data access. Another advantage is that it can provideincreased and more dynamic security, making the system more resistant tounauthorized entry and other types of security breaches.

Extensible Controls and Generic Controls

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework, isextensible controls. Extensible controls can be used to create differentdata types in the content management system of the communitiesframework. They can completely abstract away from the content managementapplication programming interfaces (APIs) and make type creation codeeasier to read and write. An extensible portlet can also provided forenabling easy creation of highly configurable and flexible content typesand properties at runtime. The extensible portlet can call upon variouscontrols to implement this functionality. Generic controls, on the otherhand, can further wrap the extensible controls in order to add moreintuitive and flexible APIs for the developers. Resources within thecontent management repository can be actually stored as nodes i.e.properties and values that describe the content as well as the contentitself. These nodes are further wrapped by simple Java objects thatrepresent the property value attributes of each particular node. Thus,an object class can be dynamically generated and cached for performancereasons. The primary keys associated with the object classes can also becached so as to improve access time.

In one embodiment, a Generic Control deals with a node wrapper objectand not the actual node. For example, a LinksControl<Link> could becreated that deals with only Link objects or a IssuesControl<Issue>could be created that deals only with issues, and so on. ExtensibleControls, on the other hand, can be used to perform the actual CRUD(create, read, update and delete) operations on the data, via thecontent management APIs. In this manner, each generic control wraps anextensible control that deals directly with the content managementsystem. So the LinksControl<Link> can have a LinksCmxControl (extensiblecontrol) that understands how to map the link object to the node in thecontent management repository.

In one embodiment, a developer using extensible controls can be a moresophisticated and knowledgeable developer since extensible controls canrequire detailed knowledge of the content repository, node structure aswell as the control structure itself. On the other hand, genericcontrols do not require such intimate knowledge of the repository andthis developer need only be aware of certain aspects of object types inorder to implement this functionality. Thus, generic controls can beconceptually easier to understand and implement than extensiblecontrols.

Different annotations can be used to represent the properties of eachcontent type. Users or developers can then be allowed to dynamicallycreate new content types in the repository. Similarly, developers canalso be given the ability to dynamically add, modify, or removeproperties from each existing resource (i.e. content type). Nodecreation code can be annotated in order to create types. Rather thanmaintaining dual code for object and node creation a singleimplementation can be instituted via the use of annotations.

FIG. 8A is an exemplary illustration of the generic and extensiblecontrols feature, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention. Although this diagram depicts components as logicallyseparate, such depiction is merely for illustrative purposes. It will beapparent to those skilled in the art that the components portrayed inthis figure can be combined or divided into separate software, firmwareand/or hardware components. Furthermore, it will also be apparent tothose skilled in the art that such components, regardless of how theyare combined or divided, can execute on the same computing device or canbe distributed among different computing devices connected by one ormore networks or other suitable communication means.

In one embodiment, community data can be contained within a repository(850) as discussed above, and stored in various nodes (846). Contentobject wrappers (848) can be used to wrap each node in the repositorycontaining the data. Thus, a link object wrapper can be used to wrap thedata contained in the node for that particular link. An object wrappercan be a simple java object which is associated with the particular nodein the repository. A control framework (840) can also be provided tosimplify access to the community content. In one embodiment, a genericlinks control (842) can be provided to encapsulate the business logicand provide a valuable interface to the repository data. The linksgeneric control can wrap an extensible links CmxControl (844) which canbe responsible for performing CRUD operations on the nodes in therepository. Thus, a links control can have a links CmxControl whichunderstands how to map the link object to the node within the contentmanagement system. A developer (852) can use the various controls inorder to easily create and access content within the various communitiesby placing a call to the control within a JSP for example. Calls to thecontrols can also be placed within an extensible portlet.

In various embodiments, a generic control encapsulates business logicand/or provides programmatic access to one or more resources. Genericscan provide type safe arguments and returns. Implementations of commonmethods can allow finding nodes by expression, ids, parents, etc andcreating type specific paged results. The control framework can allow acollaboration process or portlet to access the business logic orresource in a consistent, straightforward manner as though it was asimple Java® object. Controls can simplify access to common resourcessuch as databases, Java® Message Service (JMS) queues and EnterpriseJavaBeans™ (EJBs). However, the present disclosure is not limited to ordependent on any particular control implementation, programming languageor programming paradigm. It will be apparent to those of skill in theart that a control can be implemented in many other ways including, butnot limited to, as a library, subroutine, function, method, macro,procedure, and any other suitable means for encapsulating program logicand/or resources.

In aspects of these embodiments and by way of illustration, a controlcan be implemented as a Java® class and can be managed at runtime by aJ2EE EJB container. The container can provide automatic transactions,asynchrony, state management and other services. In aspects of theseembodiments, a control's Java® class definition includes annotations(e.g., Javadoc annotations) that define the control's runtime behavior.A control can use and be used from a web service, a pageflow, a JSP, abusiness process, a portlet and another control. Preferably, controlsare community-scoped, since each is associated with a given communitythat created it.

As an illustration, code for creating a resource without the use ofextensible controls can be similar to the example illustrated below.//Create a property definition PropertyDefinition[ ] propDefs = { newPropertyDefinition(new ID( ), “NAME”, null,  Property.STRING, false,false,  false, false, true /*isPrimany*/, null) }; ID typeID = new ID(); typeID.setRepositoryName(repoName); //Create a type with thatproperty definition ObjectClass oc=new ObjectClass(typeID,“PERSON_TYPE”, propDefs[0], propDefs); oc = typeManager.addType(cc, oc);// Create an instance of that type Property[ ] nodeProps = {newProperty(“NAME”, “Ray”}; Node node = nodeManager.addNode(cc,parentPath + PathHelper.SEPARATOR + nodeName, ocName,nodeHierarchyContentType, nodeProps); // Create a node wrapper instancePerson person = new Person(node);

In one embodiment, using extensible controls can enable more developerfriendly and less complex code. Thus: //PersonCmxControl.jcx - createstype and instance @Create(node Type = “PERSON_TYPE”) public PersoncreatePerson (  @Property(name=”NAME, isKeyField = true, isPrimary=true) String Name ); //In NewNodeControlImpl.jcs: @ControlNewNodeCmxControlBean newNodeControl; Person person =newNodeControl.createPerson(“Ray”);

Administration tools can also be provided to enable users and developersto create new content types and to add new property types to theexisting content types all during runtime. Templates can be provided forusers to add their desired properties. For example, a user may edit theprovided template to change the order of the properties for a givenresource. Alternatively, the user may implement a custom template layingout the resource data type in a completely different manner, customizedto the specific needs of the community.

Node wrappers can also provide various benefits to data access andmanipulation. Access to data can be significantly simplified. Forexample, a call such as “getProperty(“TITLE”) !=null ?getProperty(“TITLE”).getStringValue( ): null” can be abstracted into amuch simpler call such as “getTitle( ).” Type information as classrather than data can enable a Folders/Beans composite pattern which canmirror the Hierarchy/Content Nodes. Inheritance of common attributes canbe supported and when used in concert with controls, node wrappers alsoserve to provide type safety.

Illustrated below are code examples for creating a newType,newTypeCmxControl, newTypeControl and newTypeControlImpl in accordancewith various embodiments of the invention. The code included in thisapplication is not intended in any way to restrict the scope of theinvention but is merely being provided for illustrative purposes.//create NewType //extend CommunityContent public class NewType extendsCommunityContent //Node Conversion Constructor public NewType(Node node){ this.node = node;} //getters, setters public String getProperty( ){return getValue(getNodeProperty(“PROP”)); } public voidsetResolution(String r) {setProperty(“PROP”, new Value(r));} //createNewTypeCmxControl //extend CmxControl and annotate@org.apache.beehive.controls.api.bean.ControlExtension @CmxControl.-RepositoryInfo(repositoryName=“Community_Repository”) public interfaceIssuesCmxControl extends CmxControl //@Create @Create(nodeType=“ISSUE”)public Issue createIssue( @ParentId( ) ID parentId,@Property(name=“PROP”, isKeyField=true) String property) ) throwsException; //@FindBy (retrieve & delete) @FindBy(expression=“PROP ==‘{prop}’”) public NewType getNewType(String prop) throws Exception;@FindBy(expression=“PROP == ‘{prop}’”, removeResults=true) publicNewType removeNewType(String prop) throws Exception; //createnewTypeControl //extend CM_Control and annotate @ControlInterface publicinterface NewTypeControl extends CM_Control<NewType> //create publicNewType create(ID parentId, String prop); //retrieve public NewTypegetNewType(String prop); //create NewTypeControlImpl //extend CM_Controland annotate @ControlInterface public class NewTypeControlImpl extendsCM_ControlImpl<NewType>  implements IssuesControl {   @ControlIssuesCmxControlBean issuesBeanX; . . . } //create public NewTypecreate(ID parentId, String prop) {  returnissuesBeanX.createIssue(parentId, prop); } public NewType create(Stringprop) throws Exception {  returnissuesBeanX.createIssue(DEFAULT_PARENT_ID, prop); } //retrieve publicNewType getNewType(String prop) {  return issuesBeanX.getNewType(prop);} //delete public NewType deleteNewType(String prop) {  returnissuesBeanX.removeNewType(prop); } //delete public NewTypedeleteNewType(String prop);

FIG. 8B is an exemplary illustration of a graphical user interface forsome benefits of the extensible controls feature of the communitiesframework, in accordance with various embodiments of the invention. Asillustrated, one example of a collaborative resource may be the contentdata type announcement. An announcement can have several propertiesassociated with it, such as Title (800), Message Body (802), EffectiveDate (804), Expiration Date (806), Severity (808), Visibility (810) andAddress To (812). However, an enterprise may wish to define anAnnouncement in a different form, i.e. as containing other properties.Extensible controls can provide the developer with the ability to addnew properties to the defined version of the Announcement resource,thereby creating a new and customized version of that resource. Forexample, one enterprise or community may wish the Announcement data typeto contain the property Department, which may contain the departmentnumber of the Announcement's recipients, for example. ExtensibleControls can allow the developer to add such a property. Furthermore, auser can also create entirely new collaborative resources at runtime byimplementing extensible controls. Thus, an enterprise can define a newresource such as a Meeting (not shown), for example, which may containits own user created and defined properties.

FIG. 9 is an exemplary illustration of a graphical user interfacedisplaying a user-edited version Announcement resource, in accordancewith various embodiments of the invention. As previously described, adeveloper may wish to add the Department property to the existingAnnouncement type. The extensible controls feature allows the developerto do this without extensive knowledge of API editing or other technicalexpertise. Once a user has added the Department property (914) to theexisting Announcement data type, the display of a new version of thatresource is illustrated in FIG. 9. It can be seen that the Announcementdata type contains all the previously shown fields such as Title (900),Message Body (902), Effective Date (904), Expiration Date (906),Severity (908), Visibility (910) and Address To (912). However, inaddition, this resource now also contains the property of Department(914), as specified by the user. It should be noted that property fieldssuch as Title (900), Department (914) and others can be arranged andrearranged in a different order, as well as removed from theAnnouncement data type altogether. Similarly, entire new data types canbe created by the user with new properties specified therein. In thismanner, extensible controls provide for a more adaptive approach tocreating and managing data types and allows for a much more fluid anduser friendly system of collaboration.

In various embodiments, the communities framework can allow users toimplement existing functionality such as Search or Analytics (asdiscussed below) as well as others, to interoperate with the newlydeclared and defined resources and properties. Thus, for example, userscan search through the newly created resources, sort the resources bytheir new user-created properties or implement Analytics to monitortrends on the new resources. Of course, other such implementations arepossible and well within the scope of the present invention.

Analytics

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isAnalytics. Analytics can provide the functionality of data mining, trendobservation, and community health monitoring to the communitiesframework. In other words, it can allow community users andadministrators to view specified statistics pertaining to theircommunity. Analytics can provide more than a mere snapshot who is on thewebsite or how many visitors log onto the website. It is designed tomonitor various aspects of the health of the community. For example, adeveloper may wish to monitor how many people are visiting theenterprise's website over a specific period of time. Alternatively, acommunity manager may wish to monitor how many members are becomingcontributors to his/her community. Yet another member (e.g. communityowner) may wish to observe how his/her community compares to othercommunities on a particular scale. All this information can be displayedgraphically within a portlet as part of the communities framework.

FIG. 10 is a flow diagram illustration of the Analytics feature of thecommunities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention.

In step 1000, a new event object is created. A developer can provide thename for the desired event. The analytics information can be derivedfrom this custom created event object which can serve as a counter forthe Analytics system, carrying a very minimal payload. The event objectcan contain a minimum of three attributes, namely event type, membershiprole and community URI. All events can be made to differ via the eventtype attribute that is set before dispatch. This allows for the creationof new events for use by the system simple by annotating the new eventtype before dispatch.

In step 1002, a developer can associate the new event with a somespecific action in the communities framework. For example, the event canbe associated with a particular pageflow or a Java Server Page (JSP).The analytics will then take care of counting, organizing and displayingthe data associated with that event, such as for example counting thenumber of event occurrences.

In step 1004, a custom event listener can be implemented to collectcommunity events as they occur. In step 1006, the action associated withthe event (as shown in step 1002) may occur, thereby firing off theevent. In step 1008, the event is placed into a buffer. A buffer objectcan be created in order to receive events from the listener and holdthem until they are persisted into the content management system asillustrated and described in steps 1010, 1012, and 1014 below.

In step 1010, the system can determine whether an event resource datatype has been created that corresponds to the event that has occurred.In one embodiment, for every event object that is created, there existsa corresponding event resource within the repository. For example, everyevent object can have a unique event type attribute which is used todescribe the corresponding node within the content management system,which holds information for that event.

In step 1012, if no corresponding event resource exists, a new suchresource can be created by the system. The new event resource node cancontain the properties of description (i.e. a displayable description ofthe event the node contains information for), the current date, acounter and parent Id. All properties can be made to be single-valuedand non-restricted. In other words, the new content management systemnode type can specify a displayable description of the event that thenode contains information for, the current date, a counter for keepingtrack of the number of occurrences of the event and a parent_id. The newnode can subsequently be added to the data hierarchy in thecollaboration repository. In one embodiment, that new node willrepresent the event specified by the user or system and will keep acount of such events that have occurred. Users can also be provided withthe ability to delete event information in case it gets too large.

In step 1014, the data for the event is persisted into the repository.For example in one embodiment, the counter for the number of occurrencesof the event can be incremented and committed to the repository. Anextensible CMXControl can be written in order to handle all interactionwith the nodes in the content management system. A data content objectcan be created to wrap the analytics node type. Multiple components maybe implemented to handle the management of the buffer and to managepersisted analytics data and creation of analytics charts. Thesecomponents can take various forms such as objects, beans or any othercomponents that are reusable program building blocks or can be combinedwith other components in the same or other computers in a distributednetwork to form an application.

Analytics can provide users with the ability to create any event typesthat they choose. For example, a developer can provide an event name tothe event object and place it onto the pageflow or JSP that should beassociated with that event. The Analytics feature of the communitiesframework can then keep track of these events and organize them in therepository such that a user can display a number of events that createdduring the course of some time period. A portlet may be provided todisplay a created chart of the analytics data to the user. The user canbe given an option to select a collected statistic and a time frame(e.g. week, month, year). The matching chart can then be displayed inthe analytics portlet. In this fashion, analytics allows the systemadministrator or developer to efficiently monitor the health of aparticular community, such as whether it is growing or whether it isdying off, whether members are interested in becoming contributors, orsome other trend of interest.

Unique Key Stores

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isUnique Key Stores for the content management system. The Unique KeyStores feature can allow a user or developer to specify severalproperties of a resource, which can then be used to identify thatresource and to make it unique. As an illustration, two differentmembers of one community may wish to create a resource with the samename within the content management system. This may create problemsbecause in content management systems, uniqueness of data is typicallyguaranteed based on the names of particular resources. Thus, if tworesources have the same name, the uniqueness of data may be jeopardized.Yet it may be desirable to allow several users to create resources withidentical names. The communities framework provides a way for adeveloper to specify a different field or several fields from which datacan be guaranteed to be unique.

Content management systems are generally hierarchical in nature anddefine uniqueness much like a file system. In one embodiment, allentities (nodes) within a repository of content have a name. That nameis typically unique within the context of its containing folder. Thenode is uniquely identified within that repository by its name and pathof containing folders. This is analogous to a fully pathed file namesuch as “c:\folder1\folder2fileName.txt” This can be very limiting. Thename field of a node in the content management system is usually of alimited size, such as 50 characters, for example. On the other hand,forcing hierarchy onto the data is not always the best idea, often morethan one property of a node makes it unique. In one embodiment, toremedy this problem a unique key can be generated for a given type.Thus, a node can be uniquely identified per type/objectClass within thecontent management system. The author of extensible controls candesignate which of the node properties will be used to defineuniqueness. As an illustration, for a link, it might be the combinationof a title, description and owner properties. In one embodiment, aunique key can be generated by taking into account these properties. Inan alternative embodiment, the system can dynamically perform acomparison of the two resources without the necessity of actuallycreating a key.

In one embodiment, two different members of the community may wish tocreate a collaboration resource Link and name that Link “link_A.”Normally, the content management system would not allow both members tocreate such a Link because it would not have a way of making those twoLinks unique from each other. Unique Key Stores, however, gives theability to a developer to specify which fields can make that Linkunique. Thus, a developer may notify the content management system tocombine the Name, Visibility and the Owner properties of each Link,thereby making each Link named “link_A” unique as to each other. The twomembers would thus be allowed to create their versions of the link“link_A.” Other property fields may also be specified by the developerin accordance with various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 11 is an exemplary illustration of the unique key stores feature ofthe communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of thepresent invention. Two members of a community may each wish to create alink within the repository (1100). The content management system musthave a way of making certain data types such as links unique as to oneanother in order to provide access to the data. Thus, a unique key, suchas unique_key_A (1102), unique_key_B (1104) and unique_key_N (1106) canbe generated for each collaboration resource such as the two links(1108, 1110) and the issue (1112) within the repository (1100). A uniquekey can be generated from one or more properties of each collaborationresource, as dictated by the user. For example, the user may opt for thename (1114, 1120), the owner (1116, 1122) and the visibility (1118,1124) properties to be used in generating a unique key for the linkcollaboration resource (1108, 1110). Such an implementation would allowtwo members to each create a link with the same name as the other membersuch as “link_A” as illustrated above.

Meanwhile, other collaboration resources such as an issue (1100) couldhave their unique keys generated from other properties such as name(1126), description (1128), priority (1130), owner (1132) and visibility(1134). As illustrated in FIG. 11, for example, a user can select onlythe name (1126) field to be used in generating the unique keys forissues resources. In alternative embodiments, the properties can bedynamically compared and no actual key needs to be generated. Theimplementation of the two options can be made configurable. In thismanner, the unique key stores feature allows for a much more flexibleand user-adaptable collaboration and community customization.

Dynamic Content

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isdynamic content. A dynamic content tag library can be provided forallowing developers to add dynamic content functionality to a portlet,without any need for javascript coding or API editing. The dynamiccontent feature provides users with the ability to update a certainportion or portlet of a page or a portion of a portlet. In other words,it can allow for granular micro-interaction between the server and thebrowser without reloading the entire browser each time that interactionoccurs.

A dynamic container can be declared to be a targeted dynamic area in theuser interface which can be updatable dynamically. The dynamic container(such as an HTML table) can be specified by an id number. An updaterequest can be executed implementing a series of actions (e.g. pageflowactions), the results of which return an HTML fragment to replace thecontents of the dynamic container marked by the appropriate id number.Thus, a client request can be populated by parameter tags and executedbehind the scenes, without the need to refresh the entire browser.

One advantage of updating the dynamic container in such a fashion isthat the page flow actions implemented are completely normal and theJava Server Pages (JSPs) that they forward to are also completelynormal, i.e. there is nothing different that must be modified in orderto achieve dynamic updates. No Javascript needs to be written by thedeveloper, the dynamic content tags provide all of the Javascript andother coding necessary. A developer can thus merely target a particularaction with dynamic content tags and the rest is generated for him. AJSP can be passed a parameter to populate a certain portion of a webpage with the results of a particular action. The dynamic tags can runpageflow actions which run the logic and then forward off to a JSP. TheJSP can be a page fragment, a portlet fragment, a table, a tablefragment or some other piece of the page that gets forwarded to by thepageflow action. Thus, the developer can use regular tags, JSPs andregular pageflow actions to implement dynamic content tag updates in acompletely normal web development experience, without the requirement ofin-depth knowledge of Javascript or other complex programming languages.

In one embodiment, Asynchronous JavaScript And XML (AJAX) typefunctionality can be provided. Thus, instead of the traditional form ofclient-server communication where the client sends a completed form tothe server and the server responds by sending a new web page, a moremodular form of interaction is possible. An AJAX application can send arequest to the web server to retrieve only the data that is needed, suchas by using a SOAP or XML-based web dialect. Consequently, a much moreresponsive interface can be achieved because the amount of dataexchanged between the web server and the client is significantlyreduced. In turn, a higher number of client-server transactions could besupported by one server, since dynamic content tags enable for muchsmaller communications between the server and each client. For example,merely a portlet can be updated instead of refreshing the entirebrowser. Furthermore, even more granularity can be provided with thedynamic content tags feature. Just one piece of the portlet's userinterface can be updated dynamically without the need to update theentire portlet. For example, a stock trading value within a portlet canbe updated via the dynamic content tags feature, without re-posting theentire browser or even the portlet. Full pages, portions of pages,tables, portions of tables as well as other pieces and segments can beupdated dynamically. Such granularity of communication allows for a muchmore responsive user interface and data exchange. Another advantage canbe reduced server workload because the server is not burdened withre-running security on every portlet, re-rendering all HTML for theentire page and re-downloading all of the Javascript every time that acommunication occurs. Instead, only the necessary updates are sent viathis dynamic granular interaction.

FIG. 12A is an exemplary illustration of a graphical user interfaceduring the execution of dynamic content feature, in accordance withvarious embodiments of the invention. RSS (1200) is a rich site summaryfeed implemented as a portlet on a page, which provides constantlyupdated content from other web sites that a community member may havesubscribed to. For example, this user has subscribed to the CNN® (cablenews network) website and consequently the RSS portlet is displaying alist of web links (1204) to various news stories offered on CNN. Thedynamic container (1202) is set to display a selected news story or aportion thereof. In FIG. 12A, the user has selected the news story“California wildfire scorches 20,655 acres” (1206) and the dynamiccontainer (1202) is displaying the text of the appropriate news story.

In FIG. 12B, the user has clicked on the next story link, i.e. the“Bennett under fire for remarks on blacks, crime” link (1208) and thedynamic container (1202) has changed accordingly to display the text ofthat news story. An update request was executed behind the scenes, theresults of which returned an HTML fragment to replace the contents ofthe dynamic container with a new news story corresponding to the linkthat the user has clicked on. It is important to note that while acommunication occurred between the user's desktop and the CNN server,the entire page did not get re-posted. For example, the scroll bar(1210) did not get re-sent to the top of the web page, as normallyhappens during a full refresh of the entire browser. Similarly, if someforms were filled out on the other parts of the page, they would nothave been erased. Only the contents of the dynamic container (1202) wereupdated by this piece of micro-interaction between the CNN server andthe client computer.

The dynamic content feature can be implemented by various services inthe communities framework. For example, during drag and drop (asdescribed in further detail below) only the resource drop zone may beupdated, instead of refreshing the entire browser. Similarly, otherservices and features can use the functionality of the dynamic contenttags in order to provide a more dynamic and responsive user interface.The amount of data exchanged between the server and various clients canalso be greatly reduced, leading to performance enhancements and abilityto support more numerous users and clients per each server.

The dynamic content tags allow a hit to the same pageflow instance thatthe portlet is running against. For example, in a pageflow basedportlet, the state of the portlet along with other variables can bemaintained by the pageflow. In one embodiment, access to thesevariables, such as the state of the portlet, is available during thedynamic content tags based update. During a regular re-post of a page,if a user leaves the page and subsequently returns, the pageflowremembers the state, what was selected on the page and any values thatmay have been set or forms that may have been filled out by the user. Inone embodiment, the same access to the pageflow state and othervariables is available to the dynamic content tags updates. Thus, theclient server can interact with the dynamic update and access to thepageflow state is provided.

FIG. 12C is a flow diagram illustration of the dynamic content feature,in accordance with various embodiments of the invention. In step 1230, adynamic container tag can be provided to specify the targeted area on aclient's user interface to be updated dynamically. This area will bereferred to as the dynamic container and can take the form of an HTMLtable or some other portion of the page on the user interface that maybe referenced by some assigned unique id. In step 1232, a series ofcontainer action script tags can be provided to specify the action (suchas a pageflow action for example) to be executed. In step 1234,parameter tags can describe the parameters which will be used topopulate the action described by the action script tags. In step 1236,the action can be executed. In one embodiment, the action can take theform of an update request and the results of the request can return theHTML fragments with the intention to replace the dynamic container. Instep 1238, the client can receive the results of the action (e.g. updaterequest). Thus, in step 1240, the old contents of the dynamic containercan be deleted and replaced with the new contents returned by thespecified action script. In various embodiments, other action scripttags can also be provided to specify which actions can be used to updatethis particular dynamic container area.

As an illustration, one Java Server Page (JSP) that implements dynamiccontent tags can be written as follows: <%@page contenType=”text/html;charset=UTF-8” language=”java”%> <@pageimport=“org.apache.beehive.netui.pageflow.PageFlowUtils”%> <@ tagliburi=“http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core” prefix=“c”%> <@ tagliburi=“http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/fmt” prefix=“fmt”%> <%@ tagliburi=“http://beehive.apache.org/netui/tags-html-1.0” prefix=“ne tui”%> <@taglib uri=“http://beehive.apache.org/netui/tags-databinding-1.0”prefix=“netui-data”%> <@ tagliburi=“http://www.bea.com/servers/portal/tags/netuix/render”prefix=“render”%> <@ taglib uri=“dragdrop.tld” prefix=“dragdrop”%> <@taglib uri=“/WEB-INF/tags/wlpGroupSpace/util”prefix=“wlpGroupSpaceUtils”%> <@ taglib uri=“dc.tld” prefix=“dc”%><fmt:bundle basename=“${pageFlow.il8nBundlel”> <fmt:messagekey=“add.issues.link” var=“addIssues”/> <fmt:messagekey=“add.folder.link” var=“addFolders”/> <fmt:message key=“in.label”var=“inLabel”/> </fmt:bundle> <fmt:bundlebasename=“com.bea.apps.groupspace.Common”> <fmt:messagekey=“toggle.folders” var=“toggleFolders”/> </fmt:bundle> <% StringtheHref = PageFlowUtils.getRewrittenActionURI(pageContext.getServletContext( ), request, response, “searchIssues”,) String[ ][ ] tabsArray =new String[2][2]; tabsArray[0][0] = “Browse”; tabsArray[0][1] = null;tabsArray[1][0] = “Search”; tabsArray[1][1] = theHref; %> <dragdroydragDropScript/> <dc:script/> <wlpGroupSpaceUtils:renderTabstabsArray=“<%=tabsArray%>”/> <br> <dragdrop:dragDropScript/> <buttononclick=“toggleFolderView(‘<netui:rewriteName name=’treeContainer <tablewidth=“100%” border=“0” cellspacing=“0” cellpadding=“3”> <tr> <tdvalign=“top” width=“0%” id=“<netui:rewriteName name=‘treeContainer’/>” nowrap> <wlpGroupSpaceUtils:roundedBox outerColor=“white”innerColor=“graylight”  innerStyle=“padding:6px;padding-bottom:12px;”><wlpGroupSpaceUtils:roundedBox outerColor=“gray-light”innerColor=“gray-dark”> <dc:container dcContainerld=“selectNode”><dc:containerActionScript action=“selectNode” initial=“true”></dc:container> </wlpGroupSpaceUtils:roundedBox> <dc:containerdcContainerld=“issuesTree”> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“displayIssuesTree” initial=“t rue” async=“false”/><dc:containerActionScript action=“moveIssue”> <dc:containerActionParamname=“sourceId” jsEval=“getSourceId( )”/> <dc:containerActionParamname=“targetId” jsEval=“getTargetId( )”/> </dc:containerActionScript></dc:container> </wlpGroupSpaceUtils:roundedBox> </td> <td valign=“top”width=“100%”> <dc:container dcContainerld=“issueDetails”><dc:containerActionScript action=“displayIssueDetails” initial=“t rue” async=“false”/> <dc:containerActionScript action=“removeIssue”async=“false”/> <dc:containerActionScript action=“addEditIssue”/><dc:containerActionScript action=“editIssue” async=“false”><dc:containerActionParam name=“title” inputId=“title”/><dc:containerActionParam name=“description” inputId=“descriptio n”/><dc:containerActionParam name=“resolution” inputId=“resolution”><dc:containerActionParam name=“status” inputId=“status”/><dc:containerActionParam name=“priority” inputId=“priority”/><dc:containerActionParam name=“owner” inputId=“owner”/><dc:containerActionParam name=“knowledgeBase” inputId=“knowledgeBase”/></dc:containerActionScript> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“createIssue” async=“false”> <dc:containerActionParamname=“title” inputId=“title”/> <dc:containerActionParamname=“description” inputId=“description”/> <dc:containerActionParamname=“resolution” inputId=“resolution” <dc:containerActionParamname=“status” inputId=“status”/> <dc:containerActionParamname=“priority” inputId=“priority”/> <dc:containerActionParamname=“owner” inputId=“owner”/> <dc:containerActionParamname=“knowledgeBase” inputId=“knowledgeBase”/></dc:containerActionScript> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“addEditIssueFolder”/> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“createIssueFolder” async=“false”> <dc:containerActionParamname=“title” inputId=“title”/> </dc:containerActionScript><dc:containerActionScript action=“editIssueFolder” async=“false”><dc:containerActionParam name=“title” inputId=“title”/></dc:containerActionScript> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“nextFolderChildrenPage” async=“false”> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“prevFolderChildrenPage” async=“false”> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“lastFolderChildrenPage” async=“false”> <dc:containerActionScriptaction=“firstFolderChildrenPage” async=“false”> </dc:container> </td></tr> </table> <script language=“javascript”>  functiontoggleFolderView(theId)  {   var obj;   if(obj =document.getElementById(theId)){    if(obj.style.display == “none”){    obj.style.display = “block”;    }    else{     obj.style.display =“none”;    }   }   } </script> </script>Notification System

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework is thenotification system. For example, a notification manager can provide thecommunity with the functionality of monitoring various announcements anddisplay them as they become due. In one embodiment, the notificationmanager can be implemented as a work manager timer object provided bythe WebLogic® Server from BEA Systems Inc. The notification manager canbe set to execute every n seconds (n seconds being some arbitraryspecified period of time) and during one these executions, it candetermine whether there are any announcements in the repository whichneed to be sent to their respective recipients or some other updatesthat may need to be executed.

FIG. 13A is a flow diagram illustration of the notification managermanaging various announcements, in accordance with one embodiment of theinvention.

In step 1300, the notification manager may be set by the developer oruser to go off and execute every 30 seconds. At this time thenotification manager would request a manager class object to provide itwith a list of all the announcements for this community within therepository, as illustrated in step 1302.

In step 1304, the notification manager would then iterate through eachannouncement in the list of returned announcements to determine whetherit is time for the particular announcement to be sent to its recipient.Thus, during each iteration, the notification manager would check ifthere are any more announcements left (step 1306) and if there are, itwould determine whether it is time for that announcement to be sent toits recipient (step 1308). It could use the announcement's property ofnotification_date in determining whether it is time for the particularannouncement to be sent. If the announcement should be sent, thenotification manager can send the announcement (step 1310) and continuewith the iteration through the announcement list. The notificationmanager can obtain the recipient information for the announcement fromits address_to field. If there are no more announcements left in thelist, the notification manager could then go back into dormant state andwait until its next execution time.

FIG. 13B is an exemplary illustration of the notification system classdiagram, in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention.Although this diagram depicts components as logically separate, suchdepiction is merely for illustrative purposes. It will be apparent tothose skilled in the art that the components portrayed in this figurecan be combined or divided into separate software, firmware and/orhardware components. Furthermore, it will also be apparent to thoseskilled in the art that such components, regardless of how they arecombined or divided, can execute on the same computing device or can bedistributed among different computing devices connected by one or morenetworks or other suitable communication means.

As shown, notification can be provided for all announcements that arecurrently in effect. The servletContextListener (1350) can beimplemented for listening to the servlet context events and respondingto them via an appropriate interface. The timer listener (1354) objectcan be created for monitoring the timing intervals (if used) and forlistening to invocations (or pings) from the client. The timer listener(1354) can invoke the poller (1356) object by calling upon anotifyAnnouncements( ) method. The poller (1356) class can beresponsible for notifying the proper recipients of their respectiveannouncements. It can use the control architecture (1370) in thisendeavor. For example, the poller can implement generic pollerControl(1358) via the notifyPendingAnnouncements( ) method. The pollerControlcan have the extensible pollerCmxControl (1360) associated with it forhandling interaction with the nodes in the repository. Thus, the genericpollerControl can implement the extensible pollerCmxControl via thegetEffectiveAnnouncementsToNotify( ) and pollerControl can alsoimplement sendNotification( ) for every announcement returned. Thestatic notificationHelper (1362) can be responsible for creating thecommunityNotification (1364) and returning the implementation of thecommunityNotification to the pollerControl. The pollerControl can alsobe responsible for setting the attributes of the notifications andsending them appropriately. The announcementNotification (1372) and theinvitationNotification (1366) classes can inherit from thecommunityNotification class and can be specific for each type ofresource.

In one embodiment, the notification manager can be located on a serverand can be executing in response to the client pinging fornotifications. Any community application or portlet can register itselfwith the notification service in order to communicate to registeredcommunity members changes that occur within the application. Forexample, the issues log portlet can allow for community members toregister their interest in changes to certain specific issues or to allissues resources. Afterwards, when issues are updated or new issues areadded, the appropriate members can be notified of the change. As such,pinging for notifications allows community members to be notified uponupdates to any of their subscribed-to information.

In one embodiment, the client can ping the server every so often,inquiring into updates of any information that the client has subscribedto. The server can then call on the notification manager to look uprelevant information for that client that it knows and then return thatinformation to the client. In one embodiment, the notification managercan know of this information through the publish and subscribe service.Thus, the information can be updated to the client automatically,requiring no input from the user. For example, newly arrived emails,tasks that are due soon, calendar items, meeting reminders,announcements sent to the member, invitations to a meeting, as well asother information can be updated by the notifications manager. In oneembodiment, the server is informed of the community member's registeredinterests by the publish and subscribe service and upon each ping, thenotifications manager can check the relevant updates for that communitymember. It can then call on the notifications center service (portlet)to modify the member's UI to display updated information.

One advantage of the pinging for notifications feature is that all ofits functionality can be accomplished without the need for any serverpush. One commonly known way to provide automatic notifications ofupdated information to a client without the client requesting suchinformation, is by implementing some sort of server push. A server pushis a process whereby a server maintains an open connection with abrowser after the initial request for a page. The server can thenforce-refresh the browser on the client every time a piece ofinformation is updated on the server. There are multiple disadvantageswith this type of system. Firstly, server push works poorly over slowernetworks. Secondly, it is difficult to implement server push andadditional technology is typically required such as a flash plugininstalled or an additional applet running in the background. The presentsystem eliminates the need for such technology by employing the pingingfor notifications feature. Another advantage of this type of system isthat the notification process can implement the dynamic content tagsfeature instead of merely notifying the user upon web page refreshes.Thus, a community member may be informed of new notifications withoutrequiring any action on his or her part and a granular portion of a pagecan be updated rather than fully re-posting the entire page.

FIG. 14 is a flow diagram illustration of the pinging for notificationsfeature functioning in combination with the notifications manager.

In step 1400, a member of a community, such as member_A can subscribe toreceive notifications of any updates of a particular collaborationresource such as all the issues for example. In another embodiment, themember can subscribe to receive notifications about other data, such asreminders about tasks due, new emails and invitations. The publish andsubscribe service can provide the member with this ability.

In step 1402, after subscribing, member_A's desktop can continuouslyping the server for any updates to the presently available Issues. Forexample, the client computer can ping the server every fifteen seconds,requesting any available updates for member_A. The specific time amountcan be configured by the user. Each ping can be implemented to send aminimum amount of information required, such as the user_id of member_Aas well as any other necessary identifications (e.g. id of the communitythat member_A is in). By minimizing each ping, the performance of thenotifications system can be significantly improved. Furthermore, thedynamic content feature (as described above) can be implemented inconjunction with the notification system so as to take advantage of moregranular and dynamic client/server interaction.

In step 1404, the resource is modified in some manner. For example,another member_B may subsequently create a new issue and add it to thelist of presently available issues. Upon receipt of the next ping, thenotifications manager can then look up and update the relevantinformation.

Thus, in step 1406, the server would receive a ping from member_A'sdesktop requesting any available updates for member_A. At this point,the server can determine who is requesting the particularupdate/notification. In other words, the notification manager candetermine from the ping which member is logged onto the client that sentthe ping.

In step 1408, the notifications manager (preferably located on theserver) can look up what information to update for member_A. There areseveral ways that it can perform this function. In one embodiment thenotification manager can call on the publish and subscribe service todetermine which information member_A has subscribed to. For example,member_A may have previously subscribed to receive updates of aparticular stock price displayed in a portlet. The notification managerwould know this from the publish and subscribe service and could go outacquire the required information. In an alternative embodiment, thenotification manager does not require any input and can perform its ownlogic determining the appropriate information to return. For example,the notification manager may know to check for any new emails,announcements and/or invitations for member_A, all without requiring anyinput from the subscription service.

In step 1410, once the server knows that member_A has subscribed toupdates of all issues, it can look up the change to the list of issues.In step 1412, the server can then return the relevant information backto the original pinging member_A. For example, the notifications managercan update the user interface portion of member_A's desktopautomatically to display the updated information, without requiring anyinput from member_A. The notifications manager can be AJAX based. Thedynamic content tags feature can be used in conjunction with thenotifications manager in order to more responsively update the member'sparticular portlet or portion thereof. For example, a value within aportlet may be dynamically updated each time the notification managerupdates it, without re-posting the entire browser. Thus, a granular andpreemptive updating process is achieved, yet requiring very little or nouser interaction.

Each ping can be implemented to be abstract and nonspecific so as toprocess the smallest possible amount of data. Thus, rather than askingthe server for updates to a specific type of information (requiring theidentification of that information), the client can instead send a muchless complex request, such as a ping for any available informationcarrying the particular user's user_id. The server can then look up therelevant updates for that client which it can obtain from the publishand subscribe process discussed above and return that information to therequesting member. In other embodiments, each ping can also carry moreinformation such as the identification of the requested info. Thedynamic content tags feature can also be implemented with pinging fornotifications, in order to more responsively update the user interfaceof the requesting member, without the need to refresh the entire page.The pinging for notifications can also be implemented with otherservices and portlets, enabling a more dynamic community membershipexperience. For example, any selected page value can be updated ornotified by the pinging for notifications feature. A member can beautomatically notified whenever a new email arrives addressed to him orher. In another embodiment, a member can be notified soon before aparticular task becomes due as a reminder to complete that task.Whenever a member is invited to join a community, the notificationssystem can notify the member of this new invitation automatically. Yetin another embodiment, once an announcement is sent to multiple members,the notifications manager can notify each recipient member about theannouncement and update their user interface accordingly. Thenotifications manager can perform all of the logic required, such asdetermining what kind of information needs to be looked up and when theuser needs to be notified. This can free up each client from performingthese tasks thereby enabling a faster and more dynamic communityexperience. A variety of notifications and reminders can be aggregatedinto one user interface, pulling various messages from multiplecommunities. Caching techniques may also be implemented, so as toimprove access time to group projects and updates to information sharedby multiple members. For example, there may be a large number of clientspinging for notifications of a specific item of data (e.g. a weatherportlet update). In that scenario, it is undesirable for the server toretrieve the information repeatedly upon every ping/request for it. Thenotification system can implement caching in an effort to reduce suchnumber of retrievals. Thus, upon the first ping, the notificationmanager can store the weather update information in a cache and uponsubsequent pings from other clients, it have access to that informationwithout the need to retrieve it again.

In one embodiment, a notification center portlet may be implemented forproviding retrieved information to the user. For example, once a memberis notified of a particular announcement, he may call the notificationcenter portlet to display, organize and browse the appropriate data. Thenotification center can also be implemented to call upon other portletsfor displaying the relevant data. As an illustration, member_A can benotified by the notifications manager of several announcements that aredirected to that particular member. The notification center portlet canbe rendered on member_A's desktop, informing him that severalannouncements are ready for viewing. Once member_A opens the window, thenotification center can then call the appropriate announcement portletto display each specific announcement.

Resource Interlinking

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isresource interlinking. A collaboration resource can allow forrelationships to other collaboration resources. Each collaborationresource can allow other collaboration resources to be linked or relatedto it by a one-to-many type of relationship. These relationships can beturned into hyperlinks that activate the correct viewer or editorportlet for the particular resource type referred to.

In one embodiment, resource interlinking could implement the linkproperties type feature of the content management system. Any datawithin the content management system can be associated with any otherdata in the content management system, so long as one of those pieces ofcontent has a link properties type on it. The link properties type canbe a property type that a developer adds to a piece of content. In thismanner, a relationship among two or more resources can be created. Thecontent management system typically does not imply anything about whatthese relationships can mean or how to take advantage of them or how tonavigate between them. Content within the repository can be of differenttypes, i.e. containing different properties. For example, one resourcemay have the properties author, department number, and owner, whileanother resource may have entirely different properties (e.g. severity,description, etc.). Furthermore, some of this data may not even beintended to be human-readable. Thus, various viewer portlets may need tobe provided for displaying resource information to the user, includingits properties.

Because any resource type can be linked to any other resource type, thesystem should preferably determine what type of resource is linked tothe selected resource. The system can then determine which associatedviewer portlet can best display this type of content to the user. Thusthe correct portlet should be called upon to view the data for thelinked resource in some coherent fashion. For example, the announcementresource may have the view_announcement portlet, the document may haveits own view_document portlet and soon. The system can determine whichtype of resource is linked and force the portal browser to navigate toand execute the portlet associated with that resource.

A relationship amongst resources can be specified via the drag and dropfeature (as discussed below), or by pasting or in some other manner asavailable in the art. The related resources can be displayed in asection of the user interface, where each related item has its icon anda link to itself. Thus, clicking on a related resource title can take auser to that resource in its own portlet.

As an illustration, a given collaboration resource such as an Issue canhave a property called related content. A user can then specify variousother resources in that field by, for example, dragging a resource intothe field and dropping it there. Thus, a user can select a givendocument and drag it into the related content field of a selected issue,dropping it there. Consequently, the user's selected document willrelate to the selected issue. The user will then be able to navigateamong the two resources by simply clicking on the appropriate linkwithin the related content field. In this manner, a kind of neuralnetwork can be created amongst the collaboration resources, allowing fora more dynamic and fluid community experience for its members. Users areable to navigate between the application and the heterogenous resourcesas well as bring up tools of a particular resource. A referer/refereetype of relationship can be implemented such that bi-directionalnavigation can be achieved between multiple resources. For example, thelist of resources that the resource relates to can be labeled“references” and the list of resources that relate to the resource canbe labeled “referenced from.” It can be important to separate thereferences for security purposes. For example, a user may have accessrights to remove links from one resource but he may not be allowed toremove links to that resource from other resources. Because thereferences are separated, the user can be precluded from deleting dataoutside of his capabilities.

FIG. 15 is an exemplary illustration of the resource interlinkingfeature, in accordance with various embodiments of the invention. Acontent repository is shown, containing various folders or nodes such asthe communities folder (1502), the users folder (1506) and theapplication (1504), portal (1508) and community A (1510) folders. Therepository (1500) contains various collaboration resources such asissues (1512), groupnotes (1514) and links (1516). Each collaborationresource can be stored as a node within the repository and a contentobject can wrap that node specifying the type of resource it is. Genericand extensible controls can interact with the object wrappers and nodesrespectively. One user, such as user_A (1506) is able specify arelationship between two resources such as the SampleIssue (1518,1526)and SampleGroupnote (1520,1528) resources. Upon dragging and dropping orrelating the two resources in some other manner, user_A can subsequentlynavigate between the groupnote and the issue resources. In this fashion,any number of resources can be related to other resources. For example,documents can relate to issues, announcements can relate to events andso on.

The term relationship, as used herein, can also refer to something morethan a mere hyperlink in one document to another. While resourceinterlinking does provide an ability for community members to navigatebetween related resources by clicking on their links, it can also allowfor a more versatile functionality. Other heterogeneous resources andservices can know of a particular relationship among two resources andcan implement that relationship in some meaningful way. For example, asearch service may implement resource interlinking in order to searchall related resources to a particular resource, while other services mayimplement resource interlinking for their own appropriate purposes.Resource interlinking can also be related to portlet activation. Forexample, there may be several instances of the issues portlet and onemust be selected in order to show the issue that is related to someother resource and brought up from another portlet (e.g. documentlibrary portlet). The communities framework provides for a way todetermine which issue should be activated and its details brought up. Assuch, the resource interlinking feature can provide a much more fluid,adaptable and user-friendly collaborative environment.

A developer can be provided with the ability to specify what arelationship among several resources may mean or imply. This need not bestrictly defined within the communities framework so as to allow a morecustomized approach to collaboration. For example, one enterprise maywish to define a relationship to be merely a navigation link, whileanother may wish to implement relationships in their own implementationsof various communities. Other applications of resource interlinking arepossible and the above examples are not intended to exhaust all of them.

Drag and Drop

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isdrag and drop functionality. The drag and drop tag library provides forthe ability of a user to drag and drop various resources and portletsfrom one page element to another. Upon any given drop, a Javascriptfunction could be called, a pageflow action could be submitted or a formaction could be called to perform the desired functionality.

FIG. 16 is an exemplary illustration of the drag and drop feature inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention. A member's userinterface is shown as displaying a collaboration resource of type issue,titled “Sample Issue” (1600). This resource has various propertiesassociated with it such as title (1606), description (1608), owner(1610), resolution (1612), status (1614), priority (1616), flagged(1618) and related content (1604). The user is shown as dragging anotherresource named “Sample Groupnote” (1602) and dropping it into therelated content field (1604) of the “Sample Issue” resource (1600).Thereby, the user is creating a relationship among the two collaborationresources (as described above under the heading “Resource Interlinking”)by using the drag and drop functionality of the communities framework.

FIG. 17 is an exemplary illustration of the drag and drop feature inaccordance with various embodiments of the present invention. Theresource “Sample Issue” is displayed as having been updated after theaction performed in the previous FIG. 16. It is worth noting that a linkto the resource “Sample GroupNote” (1702) now appears in the relatedcontent (1704) field of the resource “Sample Issue” (1700). A user canhenceforth click on this link and cause information about the “SampleGroupnote” to come up on his desktop. Similarly, other heterogenousservices and resources can now know of the relationship between “SampleIssue” and “Sample Groupnote” and use this relationship for theirrespective purposes.

Drag and drop tag library can be implemented in various ways and theabove example is only intended to be one illustration. For example,users may wish to relate various other resources, or to drag a resourceinto a service instead of entering its identifier. Similarly, a usercould drag portlets such as the RSS portlet onto the page, dropping theportlet there for further execution. The drag and drop library canprovide for a highly user-friendly and fluid interface for thecommunities framework.

In one embodiment, three tags may be defined in the drag and drop taglibrary. The first tag can be called dragDropScript tag and this is thetag that can be used to include the necessary drag and drop Javascriptlibraries into the page. As such, it preferably should be includedbefore any other drag and drop tags are used on the page. This tag neednot take in any attributes and can be included with a simple statementsuch as:

<dragdrop:dragDropScript/>

The second tag can be called draggableResource and it may specify adraggable resource on the page. It can take in such attributes asimageId, resourceId and resourceName and can be called upon as follows:<dragdrop:draggableResource imageId=”0” resourceId=”${id}” resourceName=”${name}”> <img src=”/image.gif” width=”16px”height=”16px”  dragdrop:image=”true”/>${name}</dragdrop:draggableResource>

The resourceId can be the unique identifier associated with the resourcethat is being dragged. Preferably, this identifier should be the sameidentifier that is used by the underlying business logic to uniquelyidentify that resource (e.g. its unique key). The resourceId value canbe made accessible via a Javascript function getSourceId( ) when it isdropped onto a resource drop zone. Similarly, the resourceName attributeand the imageId specify the representative name and the image file ofthe resource being dragged, respectively.

The third tag can be called resourceDropZone and it identifies an areaon the page where draggable resources can be dropped. This tag can takein the attributes of targetId, jsFunctionCall, pageFlowAction andformAction. The targetId attribute can be the unique identifier of thedrop zone object. It should preferably be an identifier that can be usedby the underlying business logic to uniquely identify what objectreceived the drop action. The jsFunctionCall attribute can be aJavascript function that gets executed when a draggable resource isdropped onto this resourceDropZone. The pageFlowAction attribute canspecify the pageflow action that will be initiated when adraggableResource is dropped on the resourceDropZone. Finally, theformAction attribute can specify a Java Server Page (JSP) or a servletthat will receive a POST action when a draggableResource is dropped onthis resourceDropZone.

One example of the code to perform a drag and drop of a resource can bewritten as shown below. This code illustrates how a move issue actioncan be coded. @Jpf.Action (forwards={@Jpf.Forward(name=“success”, path=“displayIssuesTree.do”)} ) protected Forward moveIssue( ) { Forward forward = new Forward (“success”);  String sourceId =getRequest( ).getParameter(“sourceId”);  String targetId = getRequest().getParameter(“targetId”);  move (sourceId, targetId);  return forward;}

FIG. 17B is an exemplary illustration of the drag and drop tag featurefor the communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments ofthe invention. Although this diagram depicts components as logicallyseparate, such depiction is merely for illustrative purposes. It will beapparent to those skilled in the art that the components portrayed inthis figure can be combined or divided into separate software, firmwareand/or hardware components. Furthermore, it will also be apparent tothose skilled in the art that such components, regardless of how theyare combined or divided, can execute on the same computing device or canbe distributed among different computing devices connected by one ormore networks or other suitable communication means.

A developer (1700) can use the drag and drop tags (1714) while creatingjava server pages (1702), portlets or various other tools for thecommunities framework. A draggable resource (1718) and a resource dropzone (1720) can be displayed on the user interface (1722) such as atypical GUI for example. The draggable resource can associated with anyresource (1712) capable of being displayed on the user interfaceincluding but not limited to users, documents, issues, discussions,announcements or other types of collaboration resources. The drop zone(1720) can be a specific area on the page that can be specified by thedeveloper (1702) via one or more of the drag and drop tags (1714). Uponthe user such as a community member (1706, 1708) selecting the draggableresource (1718) and dragging and dropping the resource into the resourcedrop zone, an action (1716) can be performed by the system. This actioncan be specified in the drag and drop tag and can take the form of aJavascript function (1724), an AJAX call (1726) or a page flow action(1728). As an illustration, when a community member drops the draggableresource onto a drop zone, a dynamic content call can be made to aremote server, for updating the drop zone area of the user interfacewith an HTML fragment. Similarly, other implementations of the drag anddrop tags are possible and are well within the scope of the presentinvention.

Active Menus

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isactive menus. Active menus can provide the ability for developers tocreate, modify and otherwise customize menus associated with a givencollaboration resource. Users and developers can be allowed to createthe menu items dynamically, without the need for difficult hardcoding ofsuch features into the various APIs.

As an illustration, any one collaborative resource can have a menuassociated with it. A mouse-over or right-click can cause that menu tocome up, thereby displaying various menu items. For example, thecollaboration resource announcement can have menu items such as edit,delete, deliver, link, as well as others. A given menu item can run pageflow actions, be a hyperlink, call a javascript function or make andynamic content call (as previously described). A user can be allowed tocreate these menu items for each collaborative resource and to add themto the existing menu of that resource. For example, a developer cancreate a new menu item called set_time_out_value and add it to theresource announcement. Subsequently, this new menu item can be displayedalong with the previous ones upon mouse-over or right click by anymember of the community. Thus, a member can be provided with the abilityto set an expiration time (time_out_value) for a given collaborationresource announcement by clicking on the newly created menu item. Activemenus can provide for many other implementations as well, allowing afluid and user-friendly approach to creating and using menus with anygiven resource.

FIG. 18 is an exemplary illustration of the active menus tags feature,in accordance with various embodiments of the invention. A userinterface is shown, displaying a list of issue resources (1800) for acommunity. One particular issue named “Sample Issue Item” (1802) isselected by the user and upon mouse-over (or right click), a menu (1804)is displayed with various menu items. A selection of one menu item cancause the performance of a javascript function, a JSP call, or apageflow action to be submitted. In this illustration, only two menuitems, namely edit and delete are displayed for this particular menu.However, developers are provided an option to add, modify or remove menuitems from this menu by using the active menu tags feature. Furthermore,developers are provided with the ability to define the style ofdisplaying the menu, the text of each item and what action each menuitem is to perform. All of this functionality can be implemented withoutthe need for any hardcoding and API editing on the part of thedeveloper.

FIG. 19 is an exemplary illustration of another active menus tag featurein accordance with various embodiments of the invention. A userinterface is shown, this time displaying a list of favorite links (1900)for a member of a community. Upon mouse-over, a menu (1902) is displayedfor the link selected. This menu (1902) contains other menu items suchas Edit Link, Move Link Up, Move Link Down and Delete Link as specifiedby the developer for the link resource type. Many other implementationsof menus and menu items are possible and all of them can be created viathe use of tags and without intensive programming and in depth technicalknowledge.

In one embodiment, a tag library is defined for allowing a developer toeasily create new menus and menu items and associate them with variousresources. Generally, JSP tag libraries can define modular functionalitythat can be used and re-used by a JSP page. Tag libraries can reduce thenecessity to embed large amounts of Java code into JSP pages by movingthe functionality of the tags into tag implementation classes.

FIG. 20 is an exemplary illustration of the active menus framework, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention. Although thisdiagram depicts components as logically separate, such depiction ismerely for illustrative purposes. It will be apparent to those skilledin the art that the components portrayed in this figure can be combinedor divided into separate software, firmware and/or hardware components.Furthermore, it will also be apparent to those skilled in the art thatsuch components, regardless of how they are combined or divided, canexecute on the same computing device or can be distributed amongdifferent computing devices connected by one or more networks or othersuitable communication means.

A developer (2000) can use the active menu tags (2014) while creatingjava server pages (2002), portlets or various other tools for thecommunities framework. A menu (2010) can be created using the activemenu tags and this menu can be associated with a particular resource(2012) such as a document, link, announcement, user, event, or any othertype of resource. The menu can perform various actions (2016), such asjavascript functions (2024), AJAX calls (2026) or page flow actions(2028). The menu can have various menu items (2018, 2020) for executingeach of the actions described. Active menu tags can be provided fordescribing each menu item. In this fashion, a developer can create newmenus for resources as well as add new menu items to presently existingmenus. Members of the community (2006, 2008) can subsequently access theresource menus via a user interface (2022).

The configuration and use of active menus will now be described indetail and with reference to examples of various implementations andcode. Active menus can be configured by using a configuration file. Theconfiguration file such as activemenus-config.xml can be set up, theresults of which can produce multiple menus that consist of variousdifferent items, styles and icons. The configuration file can containvarious tags such as the type tag, the typeDefault tag and the menuItemtag. The type tag can define the individual menus that are to be usedwithin the web application. For example a statement such as: <typename=”foo”> </type>can define the name attribute to contain the text “foo.” This nameshould preferably be unique for each menu because that is how the menuis referenced when using the active menus tag.

A typeDefault tag can define what will be displayed within the browserwhere the active menus stag is used. A developer can control the textdisplayed, the style of that text and the image shown on mouse-over (orright click) of that text. For example: <typeDefault>  <displayTextclassName=”com.foo.GetUserNameFromProfile”  methodName=”getName”/> <displayStyle class=”popup” style=”color:#000000”/>  <displayMenuImagesrc=”/foo/images/foo.gif”/> <menuStyle class=”menu”style=”background-color:#FFFFFF; border-style:dotted;”/> </typeDefault>

The displayText attribute defines the actual text that can be shown. Asillustrated above, it can call a specified class and a method withinthat class that returns a character string, which will in turn bedisplayed. An example of the code relating to the tag defined above canbe as follows: public class GetUserNameFromProfile {  public staticString getName (String userName)  {   return “XXX-“ + username + “-XXX”; } }Thus, by using the above code, configuration and the following activemenus tag:

<activemenus display=“UserName” type=‘foo’/>

The text “XXX-UserName-XXX” will appear within the browser. This wouldallow the user to user the information that is entered in the body ofthe active menus tag to look up other information that can be displayed.For instance, a username could be used to look up a user's full namethat would be displayed. Preferably, the rules would specify that thismethod must take in a character string and return a character string.

The menuItem tag can define the individual items within the popup menu.They can execute various different types of actions, such as Javascriptfunctions, links, or submit pageflow actions. It can be left up to thedeveloper to define which type of action will be performed. As anillustration, menu item tags can be written as follows: <menuItem> <param name=”userId”/>  <xmlHttp url=”GetFirstNameServlet”/>  <rowclasss=”menuRow” style=”background-color:red”/>  <text class=”menuText”style=”color:#000000”/>  <rowRollover class=”menuRowRollover” style=“background-color:green”/>  <textRolloverclass=”menuTextRollover” style=”color:#FFFFFF”/> </menuItem> <menuItem> <javascript>   <name>Testing</name>   <script>testing(this);</script> </javascript> </menuItem> <menuItem default=”true”>  <linkrul=”http://www.google.com”>   <name>Google</name>  </link> </menuItem><menuItem>  <allParams/>  <action action=”addEditLink”>   <i18nNamebundleName=”com.foo.LinksPopupMenu”   key=”edi.link”/>  </action></menuItem> <menuItem>  <allParams/>  <dcAction action=”showFeedData” dcContainerId=”feedDataContainer”>   <i18nNamebundleName=”com.foo.LinksPopupMenu”   key=”show.feedData”/>  </dcAction></menuItem>

In the example above, the menu Item tag defines several types ofindividual items within the popup menu. First such item type can bejavascript, i.e. any javascript that a developer wants to run when theuser clicks on this menu item. To make it more useful, values specifiedin the param tag can be retrieved. Another such item type can bexmlHttp, which references a servlet (which can follow all standardservlet configuration). Whatever that servlet outputs can be shown inthat row of the menu. Another item type can be a link (i.e. a static URLthat will open a new browser window pointed to the defined URL). Yetanother type can be action type, which is the name of an action thatshould be available to the page or portlet that contains the activemenus tag. This can run the action within the current browser so as toallow the use of forwards to control pageflow. A dcAction type can alsobe allowed. If you have a dynamic content container set up within thepage, a menu item can be set up to call an action and have it update thedynamic content container. This can be implemented very similar to theaction menu item, the difference being that a developer may need tospecify the dcContainerId which corresponds to the dcContainerId that isdefined within dynamic content tag feature.

When using the active menus tags, several different attributes can beplaced on the tag in order to define certain tag characteristics. Forexample, the display attribute can define what will be displayed in theplace of the tag itself. The type attribute can define what will be inthe menu and should preferably match up to a type defined in theactivemenus-config.xml file. The href attribute can be used to overridethe default anchor href for the display text of the tag. A newWindowattribute can be used to specify that the link be opened in a newbrowser window. A class attribute can be used to define a cascadingstyle sheet (CSS) class to style the display text. A style attribute candefine a css style to be placed on the display text. A rightClickattribute can be used to turn a menu into a right-click menu instead ofa mouse-over menu. A param attribute can be used to set up parametersthat can be passed in and used when defining a menu item in theactivemenus-config.xml file. The param attribute can further bespecified by the name and value attributes of the parameter.

Displaying HTML Content from Portlet as a Page Element

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework isdisplaying HTML content from a portlet as a page element. This featureof the communities framework allows a user to add rich text, such asitalics, bold, colored text to a page in the community. Additionally, itcan display documents as HTML content from several different portlets asa single document.

A groupnote collaboration resource can be created to hold various formsof information for the members of the community framework. A groupnotecan hold data such as images, links, text as well as other HTML content.Various groupnotes can also be linked to other groupnotes in ahierarchical relationship. This allows for a more collaborativeexperience, enabling a rich site of interrelated information placed bycommunity members.

A groupnotes portlet can also be provided to enable text editingfeatures, to display the groupnote or collection of groupnotes as asingle presentation and to operate as a mini browser within the actualuser interface of the member of the community. This portlet can switchinto floating element display presentation mode upon which the textediting features are removed and the groupnotes can be displayed in afloating element manner. The portlet preferences can specify whether thegroupnotes portlet is in display or edit presentation mode. A groupnotecan be selected as the home document from which the display mode can befirst rendered. An entirely different view of groupnotes may be enabledupon the display mode. Chaff and other trivial text editing matter canbe removed, and other members can be denied the ability to edit thegroupnote while it is in display mode. In one embodiment, only the body(HTML text, images, links, etc.) of the groupnote and its title isdisplayed. The borders, title bar, buttons and any other portletmaterial can be removed and the remaining groupnote data is displayed asa floating page element. In this manner, multiple groupnotes can becombined or appended to make them look and feel like a single document.Links to other groupnotes may also be provided within the homegroupnote.

Security can be implemented in order to control access to the display oredit mode of the groupnotes portlet. Roles and capabilities (aspreviously discussed) of the communities framework can provide thisfunctionality. Thus, for example, non-owners or visitors may be deniedfrom editing or deleting groupnotes that are in display mode within thegroupnotes portlet. For example, once the groupnote is in display mode,the user can be precluded from editing it unless that user satisfiescertain requirements (e.g. fits into a certain membership capability).

Page flow history and state can also be enabled via the groupnotesportlet. Thus, a member can be allowed to navigate back and forththrough the various groupnotes and choose to edit selected ones. Bothlevels of security of the community framework can be implemented withthis portlet, such as in order to prevent certain members from updatingor deleting particular groupnotes, discussed above. Groupnotes can belinked or related to one another as well as to other collaborationresources by the resource interlinking feature or by an HTML link withinthe text of the groupnote. In such fashion, the displaying HTML contentfrom a portlet as a page element feature allows for a more user friendlyand dynamic approach to collaboration.

FIG. 21 is an exemplary illustration of displaying HTML content from aportlet as a page element, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention. Although this diagram depicts components as logicallyseparate, such depiction is merely for illustrative purposes. It will beapparent to those skilled in the art that the components portrayed inthis figure can be combined or divided into separate software, firmwareand/or hardware components. Furthermore, it will also be apparent tothose skilled in the art that such components, regardless of how theyare combined or divided, can execute on the same computing device or canbe distributed among different computing devices connected by one ormore networks or other suitable communication means.

In one embodiment, various users who are members (2100, 2102) of acommunity can use the groupnotes portlet (2106) in order to accessvarious types of information. This information can be contained ingroupnote resources (2108, 2110, 2112) and stored in a repository forexample. The groupnotes portlet can display a plurality of groupnotesand can allow members to edit, delete and add new groupnotes to thecollection. Several modes of operation can be implemented for thegroupnotes portlet. One such mode can be the floating element displaypresentation. Another mode could be edit mode. Various groupnotes (2108,2110) can relate or link to one another. This link can be implemented asa hyperlink in the body of the groupnote or via the resourceinterlinking feature as previously described. Security framework (2104)can also be implemented in order to member access to the portlet. Forexample, members may be precluded from placing the groupnotes portletinto edit mode. Membership capabilities and functional capabilities canbe implemented in the security framework as previously discussed.Similarly, entitlements can be placed upon groupnote data in order tocontrol CRUD operations therein.

Test Framework

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework is thetest framework. The test framework can provide a more realistic andefficient testing of various community services by simulating areal-world type of application.

In order to create an instance of a community, regular portals should befirst disassembled by creating various portal files. The test frameworkfeature first runs regular portal instances through the disassembler.Portals can start life as a file with an extension “.portal” in XML.This file typically has pages, books, portlets, layouts, placeholdersand other information to render that portal on the screen. This file canbe disassembled by parsing the XML code and creating all necessaryobjects in the database and in this manner the .portal file can beturned into a desktop. Thus, in order to create a community, the .portalfile should preferably be disassembled first. Users and developers maybe provided with various wizards in an effort to automate this process.

Each major component (e.g. Search) may have several portals associatedwith its series of tests. Once the community instance for that portal iscreated via automated disassembly, the developer can write HMTLUnittests to access that portal as some user with any given number ofmembership capabilities, using the components to perform various tests.HtmlUnit is an extended testing framework that can allow developers towrite tests for an application based on HTML concepts such as links,forms and tables.

In one embodiment, each major test component can have its own communitythat is defined by a unique portal. Each of these communities can becreated automatically from those portal files by running each portalfile through the disassembler. These disassembled portals can beinstances of the community created for the test framework feature. Thus,all tests can be executed in a community.

Furthermore, the test framework can automatically create users, givingthem memberships in a community and mapping them to various membershipcapabilities of that community (as discussed above below the securitylevel one heading). All test component code can then be accessed and runin the context of a real user/member of the community, thereby testingmore realistic use cases.

FIG. 22 is an exemplary illustration of the test framework feature, inaccordance with various embodiments of the invention. Although thisdiagram depicts components as logically separate, such depiction ismerely for illustrative purposes. It will be apparent to those skilledin the art that the components portrayed in this figure can be combinedor divided into separate software, firmware and/or hardware components.Furthermore, it will also be apparent to those skilled in the art thatsuch components, regardless of how they are combined or divided, canexecute on the same computing device or can be distributed amongdifferent computing devices connected by one or more networks or othersuitable communication means.

In one embodiment, each major component (2200) of the communitiesframework has multiple portals associated with its series of tests. Eachof these portals can start out as a portal file (2202, 2204). Theseportal files can be ran through the dissassembler (2206) in order torender the portals (2212, 2214) representing individual communityinstances (2208, 2210). Once the community instance is created for theportal, various HTML unit tests (2216, 2218) can be written by thedeveloper (2220) in order to access that portal as some user with givenmembership and functional capabilities. Other similar testingmethodologies can be implemented in alternative embodiments instead ofusing HTML Unit tests. The test framework automatically creates users(not shown) giving them membership in the community and mapping them tomembership capabilities. The component code can subsequently be accessedin the context of a real user or member of the community. In thismanner, a more realistic and efficient testing environment is achieved,thereby enabling a better real-world type of simulation.

Search Controls

Another feature that can be provided to the communities framework issearch controls. The search controls feature can provide the use ofannotations to restrict the scope of the controls such as within onecommunity or one repository or a particular location within a singlerepository or across an entire enterprise. They can also provide asimple and user-friendly ability to construct search queries rather thanhaving to deal with the search APIs or the CM expression APIsthemselves. The search controls can use the content management systemAPIS, coupled with the security features of the communities framework inan effort to retrieve data to members, for which the membership isentitled to view.

Several options of community searches can be implemented. For example,an inter-community search can be restricted to the data in the currentcommunity and can be constrained by the security in place for thatparticular community. Cross-community can search across severalcommunities which are marked with the is Searchable community property.Communities related to certain topics can be searched in this manner.Those communities not marked with the is Searchable property can stillbe implemented to use entitlements and security level 2 feature of thecommunities framework. Federated (or virtual) repository searches canalso be implemented via full-text expressions to each repository toexecute and then aggregate the results and filter them based on usersecurity entitlements. Enterprise searches can be performed such as forlinks to web pages or content available in particular sets ofdirectories. Such searching capabilities can provide for a much morefluid and user configurable approach to developer collaboration and canimprove the amount of time and effort required for various types ofprojects.

Community members can be allowed to perform full text searches againstthe shared library. There can be a search field available in the sharedlibrary view. A community search portlet can be implemented forproviding global search capabilities for a community. Users can searchacross any community related resource such as documents, links, events,threaded discussion groups, members of the community and pages/bookswithin the community. Large results sets can be paginated for ease ofuse, and the system can cache common searches for performance reasons.Security features (as previously discussed) of the communities frameworkcan be employed to control user access and viewing of the various searchresults. Thus, result sets that are returned to the user can includeonly the items that the user has the right to view, as determined by thesecurity features of the communities framework.

In one embodiment, a community member is able to search all resourceswithin a community that he belongs to. In another embodiment, acommunity member is able to search for resources in all communities thathe is a member of. Yet in another embodiment, users are able to searchfor communities that they are interested in. For example, a user maywish to find any community that is targeted at a particular interestgroup. These may include communities that the user is a member of aswell as communities that the user is not a member of but which he may beeligible to join. These types of searches can be implemented againstcommunity meta data. Result sets could include only those communitiesthat the user is member of or those that are public and can be organizedby either relevance, date or resource type.

Developers or users can specify how many search results to return, tosave a certain number of last search results and to save this searchquery. They can also specify the search criteria in an easy intuitivefashion and the search controls can constrict the complex search fromthat. The search result object can be returned and represented bysomething that the user can click on to access.

The searches can all be scoped according to the particular controlspecified by the developer. For example, community_FullTextSearchControlcan search only the community repository, whileRepoFullTextSearchControl can search only the non-community enterpriserepositories and the EnterpriseSearchControl can search all otherconfigured enterprise resources. The user need not explicitly specifythese criteria.

In one embodiment, each search control can return the appropriatecollection of search results, depending on the control. For example,community_ExpressionsSearchControl can return a collection ofcollaboration resources, ExpressionsSearchControl can return acollection of nodes and EnterpriseSearchControl can return a collectionof Autonomy ResultDocument types.

The community-specific search controls can scope the search pathsaccording to which community instance the search is being executed in,as well as to which user is performing the search. The developer neednot specifically set the search path for the controls.

A developer can be allowed to further limit the search by specifying theobject class and bean type (e.g. which type of CommunityContent) thesearch will be executed against. Retrieved content nodes can then beused to dynamically create that type as the nodes are iterated over.

Additional parameters on the controls, i.e. control annotations may bespecified for the search, such as how many search results to return forexample. The controls can be configurable by the developer in anIntegrated Development Environment (IDE) so that the annotations canshow up as configurable properties for the controls in the IDE.

FIG. 23 is a flow diagram illustration of a method implementing thesearch controls feature, in accordance with various embodiments.

In step 2300, a developer can specify which search control is to becalled upon in response to a user's request, such as by placing a callto the control within a JSP. In step 2302, a user or member of thecommunity can request a search to be performed. The request can be afull text search type, a search for particular objects, or another typeof search. At this point a search query can be formulated by the searchcontrol. In step 2304, the search control can scope the search to someparticular location, such as a particular repository within theenterprise, a location within the repository or some other enterpriseresource. In step 2306, the search path for the query can be configuredby the search control according to the community that the request wasmade from or according to which user has made the request. Securityfeatures (as previously discussed) can be implemented by the searchcontrols in order to restrict search access. In step 2308, the searchcontrol can carry out the execution of the search, such as by calling anappropriate search engine. In step 2310, the search control can return aset of results to the user and display them in a coherent fashion, suchas within a portlet.

FIG. 24 is an exemplary illustration of the search controls feature forthe communities framework, in accordance with various embodiments of theinvention. Although this diagram depicts components as logicallyseparate, such depiction is merely for illustrative purposes. It will beapparent to those skilled in the art that the components portrayed inthis figure can be combined or divided into separate software, firmwareand/or hardware components. Furthermore, it will also be apparent tothose skilled in the art that such components, regardless of how theyare combined or divided, can execute on the same computing device or canbe distributed among different computing devices connected by one ormore networks or other suitable communication means.

In one embodiment, an enterprise (2400) can contain various resourcessuch as the community repository (2408), repositories designated fornon-community use (2402, 2404) and other enterprise resources that canbe configured to be searchable (2406). A separate search control can beimplemented for each resource or group of resources. For example, aCommunityFullTextSearchControl (2412) can be deployed so as to beresponsible for searching the community repository (2408). ARepoFullTextSearchControl (2416) can be responsible for performingsearches in non-community repositories and an EnterpriseSearchControl(2412) can be called upon to search other enterprise resources.Similarly, other search controls can also be implemented, such asseparate controls for searching within a particular location of thecommunity repository.

In one embodiment a developer can associate the search controls withappropriate JSPs. Users (2428, 2430) can request searches and thus callupon the search controls (2410) via a portal (2426) or some other formof user interface. The search controls can be responsible forformulating and executing the search requests as previously discussed.Each search control can then return an appropriate result set (2418) asthe product of executing the query. For example, theCommunityFullTextSearchControl (2412) can return a result set ofcommunity content (2418) (e.g. collaboration resources). Similarly,RepoFullTextSearchControl (2416) can return a result set of repositorycontent nodes (2424) and the EnterpriseSearchControl (2412) can returnthe result set of autonomy document type. The resulting sets ofappropriate objects can then be displayed back to the requesting uservia the portal page.

A sample search control is illustrated via the use of commented code andmethod declarations below. As illustrated, this class can perform a fulltext search outside the scope of the enterprise repositories. // The usecan be as follows: // Limit the scope of the search(getAvailableResources( ), setSearchResource( )) // Set the return type// Limit the number of indexed fields in the return type // Constructthe full text query // Execute the query @ControlInterface publicinterface EnterpriseSearchControl extends FullTextSearchControl { // Setthe defaults for search parameters. Possibilities are //EnterpriseScope.ALL_CONFIGURED and EnterpriseScope.NAMED_RESOURCE@PropertySet @Target({ElementType.FIELD, ElementType.TYPE})@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) public @interfaceEnterpriseSearchParams {    public String DiSHServerHost( ) default“localhost”;    public int DiSH_aciPort( ) default 20000;    public intIDOL_aciPort( ) default 9014;    // all types. Could also be “doc”, forexample. For multiple types, it is possible to use    //limitSearchToDocTypes    public String limitDocType( ) default “”;    //Return only the top N search results whose relevance weights are abovethis    public int limitRelevanceScore( ) default 80;    // Additionalfields to include in the found document    public String printFields( )default “title,author,dredate,creationdate,drefullfilename”;   //Additional fields to include in the found document. Default can be tosort by relevance.   // Note that, if that sort field does not exist onthe document, it will not even be returned   // by the search. Someexamples are:   // DATE   // REVERSEDATE   // RELEVANCE   //MyField:numberincreasing   // MyField:numberdecreasing   //MyField:alphabetical   // MyField:reversealphabetical   //Relevance+DRETITLE:alphabetical+Date (combined, sorted in that order)   //public String sortString( ) default “TITLE:alphabetical”;    publicString sortString( ) default “”;    // Page size    public int pageSize() default 10;    // Max to return is on parent class, SearchControl   }// Show indexed fields that are available to search. These may be usedto construct //FullTextQueryParameter expressions, eg//todo: giveexample. For now, see Autonomy_UT     public Set<String>getSearchFields( ) throws Exception; // Limit search to only thosedocuments ending with this suffix. For example, to find all //PDFdocuments, the suffix would be “pdf”. Html oocs could be the set ofsuffixes: html, htm. // You can search any combination of document typesin this manner. These criteria will be //combined with the othercriteria specified in the argumens to the findDocuments( ) methods. //This can override the property ;limitDocTypes( ), which specifies asingle doc type to // restrict the search to.     public voidlimitSearchToDocTypes(Set<String> docTypeSuffix) throws Exception; //Search for this text in these fields, Is not confined by searching for aparticular word in the // content itself. EG, find all docs whosekeywords contain ‘foo’ returns null if none found.     publicSortableFilterablePagedResult<ResultDocument> findDocuments(String    fieldText, Set<String> searchFields) throws Exception; // Contstructa simple query that will search all the Autonomy databases for this‘text’. // returns null if none found     publicSortableFilterablePagedResult<ResultDocument> findDocuments(String text)    throws Exception; // Contstruct a simple query that will search allthe Autonomy databases for this // FullTextSearch expression. // returnsnull if none found    public    SortableFilterablePagedResult<ResultDocument>    findDocuments(FullTextSearch search) throws Exception; }

The present invention may be conveniently implemented using aconventional general purpose or a specialized digital computer ormicroprocessor programmed according to the teachings of the presentdisclosure. Appropriate software coding can readily be prepared byskilled programmers based on the teachings of the present disclosure, aswill be apparent to those skilled in the software art.

In some embodiments, the present invention includes a computer programproduct which is a storage medium (media) having instructions storedthereon/in which can be used to program a computer to perform any of theprocesses of the present invention. The storage medium can include, butis not limited to, any type of disk including floppy disks, opticaldiscs, DVD, CD-ROMs, microdrive, and magneto-optical disks, ROMs, RAMs,EPROMs, EEPROMs, DRAMs, VRAMs, flash memory devices, magnetic or opticalcards, nanosystems (including molecular memory ICs), or any type ofmedia or device suitable for storing instructions and/or data.

The foregoing description of the present invention has been provided forthe purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to beexhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed.Many modifications and variations will be apparent to the practitionerskilled in the art. Particularly, it will be evident that while theexamples described herein illustrate how the invention may be used in aWebLogic environment, other application servers may use and benefit fromthe invention. In addition, while the invention is described in terms ofclients accessing servers, it will be evident that the invention alsoapplies to servers accessing other servers. The code example given arepresented for purposes of illustration. It will be evident that thetechniques described herein may be applied using other code languages,and with different code.

The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain theprinciples of the invention and its practical application, therebyenabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention forvarious embodiments and with various modifications that are suited tothe particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of theinvention be defined by the following claims and their equivalence.

1. A system for providing testing in a communities framework, comprising: a computer that provides access to a community via a portal, the community including one or more members; a service component that provides services to the members in the community and allows the members to access a set of resources; an instance of the community created in the portal and associated with the service component; and a test implemented in the instance of the community, wherein the test executes the services provided by the service component and checks the results of that execution.
 2. The system of claim 1 wherein each service component has one or more community instances associated with its series of tests.
 3. The system of claim 1 further comprising: a portal file containing data that enables the portal to be rendered.
 4. The system of claim 3 further comprising: a dissassembler for rendering the portal by disassembling the portal file and employing the data contained therein.
 5. The system of claim 4 wherein the community instance is created automatically from the portal file by running each portal file through the dissassembler.
 6. The system of claim 1 further comprising: a repository for storing the set of resources wherein data within the repository can be manipulated by the members via the service component.
 7. The system of claim 1 wherein the test is an HTML unit test written by a developer.
 8. The system of claim 1 wherein the test accesses the community instance simulating a user with one or more membership capabilities.
 9. The system of claim 8 wherein the user is created automatically by the test and wherein the user is given membership in the instance of the community by mapping the user to a membership capability.
 10. The system of claim 1 wherein the service component code is executed in the context of a real member of the community.
 11. A method for testing components of a communities framework, comprising: selecting a component that provides services to the communities framework; associating a community instance with the component; and executing a test in the community instance for testing the services provided by the component.
 12. The method of claim 11 further comprising: providing a portal representing the community instance for enabling access to the component services.
 13. The method of claim 12 further comprising: providing a portal file containing data for enabling the portal to be rendered.
 14. The method of claim 13 further comprising: rendering the portal by disassembling the portal file and employing the data contained in the portal file.
 15. The method of claim 14 wherein the community instance is created automatically from the portal file by running each portal file through the dissassembler.
 16. The method of claim 11 wherein the test is an HTML unit test written by a developer.
 17. The method of claim 11 wherein the test accesses the community instance simulating a user with one or more membership capabilities.
 18. The method of claim 17 wherein the user is created automatically by the test and wherein the user is given membership in the community instance by mapping the user to a membership capability.
 19. The method of claim 10 further comprising: providing a repository that contains a set of resources wherein members of the community can access the resources via the component.
 20. A computer-readable medium having instructions stored thereon that when executed by one or more processors cause the system to: select a component providing services to the communities framework; associate a community instance with the component; and execute a test in the community instance for testing the services provided by the component. 